Automatic isolation of multiple instruments from musical mixtures

ABSTRACT

A system, method and computer product for training a neural network system. The method comprises inputting an audio signal to the system to generate plural outputs f(X, Θ). The audio signal includes one or more of vocal content and/or musical instrument content, and each output f(X, Θ) corresponds to a respective one of the different content types. The method also comprises comparing individual outputs f(X, Θ) of the neural network system to corresponding target signals. For each compared output f(X, Θ), at least one parameter of the system is adjusted to reduce a result of the comparing performed for the output f(X, Θ), to train the system to estimate the different content types. In one example embodiment, the system comprises a U-Net architecture. After training, the system can estimate various different types of vocal and/or instrument components of an audio signal, depending on which type of component(s) the system is trained to estimate.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 17/205,296, filed Mar. 18, 2021, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/521,756, filed Jul. 25, 2019, which is continuation-in-part of each of (1) U.S. application Ser. No. 16/055,870, filed Aug. 6, 2018, entitled “SINGING VOICE SEPARATION WITH DEEP U-NET CONVOLUTIONAL NETWORKS”, (2) U.S. application Ser. No. 16/242,525, filed Jan. 8, 2019, entitled “SINGING VOICE SEPARATION WITH DEEP U-NET CONVOLUTIONAL NETWORKS”, and (3) U.S. application Ser. No. 16/165,498, filed Oct. 19, 2018, entitled “SINGING VOICE SEPARATION WITH DEEP U-NET CONVOLUTIONAL NETWORKS”, each of which applications (1) to (3) is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein.

BACKGROUND

A number of publications, identified as References [1] to [39], are listed in a section entitled “REFERENCES” located at the end of the DETAILED DESCRIPTION herein. Those References will be referred to throughout this application.

The field of Music Information Retrieval (MIR) concerns itself, among other things, with the analysis of music in its many facets, such as melody, timbre or rhythm (see, e.g., publication [20]). Among those aspects, popular western commercial music (i.e., “pop” music) is arguably characterized by emphasizing mainly the melody and accompaniment aspects of music. For purposes of simplicity, the melody, or main musical melodic line, also referred to herein as a “foreground”, and the accompaniment also is referred to herein a “background” (see, e.g., Reference [27]). Typically, in pop music the melody is sung, whereas the accompaniment is performed by one or more instrumentalists. Often, a singer delivers the lyrics, and the backing musicians provide harmony as well as genre and style cues (see, e.g., Reference [29]).

The task of automatic singing voice separation consists of estimating what the sung melody and accompaniment would sound like in isolation. A clean vocal signal is helpful for other related MIR tasks, such as singer identification (see, e.g., Reference [18]) and lyric transcription (see, e.g., Reference [17]). As for commercial applications, it is evident that the karaoke industry, estimated to be worth billions of dollars globally (see, e.g., Reference [4]), would directly benefit from such technology.

Several techniques have been proposed for blind source separation of musical audio. Successful results have been achieved with non-negative matrix factorization (see, e.g., References [26, 30, 32]), Bayesian methods (see, e.g., Reference [21]), and the analysis of repeating structures (See, e.g., Reference [23]).

Deep learning models have recently emerged as powerful alternatives to traditional methods. Notable examples include Reference [25] where a deep feed-forward network learns to estimate an ideal binary spectrogram mask that represents the spectrogram bins in which the vocal is more prominent than the accompaniment. In Reference [9], the authors employ a deep recurrent architecture to predict soft masks that are multiplied with the original signal to obtain the desired isolated source.

Convolutional encoder-decoder architectures have been explored in the context of singing voice separation in References [6] and [8]. In both of these works, spectrograms are compressed through a bottleneck layer and re-expanded to the size of the target spectrogram. While this “hourglass” architecture is undoubtedly successful in discovering global patterns, it is unclear how much local detail is lost during contraction.

One potential weakness shared by the publications cited above is the lack of large training datasets. Existing models are usually trained on hundreds of tracks of lower-than-commercial quality, and may therefore suffer from poor generalization.

Over the last few years, considerable improvements have occurred in the family of machine learning algorithms known as image-to-image translation (see, e.g., Reference [11])—pixel-level classification (see, e.g., Reference [2]), automatic colorization (see, e.g., Reference [33]), and image segmentation (see, e.g., Reference [1])—largely driven by advances in the design of novel neural network architectures.

It is with respect to these and other general considerations that embodiments have been described. Also, although relatively specific problems have been discussed, it should be understood that the embodiments should not be limited to solving the specific problems identified in the background.

SUMMARY

The foregoing and other limitations are overcome by a system, method and computer product for training a neural network system. In one example embodiment herein, the method comprises applying an audio signal to the neural network system, the audio signal including a vocal component and a non-vocal component. The method also comprises comparing an output of the neural network system to a target signal, and adjusting at least one parameter of the neural network system to reduce a result of the comparing, for training the neural network system to estimate one of the vocal component and the non-vocal component. According to an example aspect herein, the neural network system includes a U-Net.

Also in one example embodiment herein, the audio signal and the target signal represent different versions of a same musical song, the audio signal includes mixed vocal and non-vocal (e.g., instrumental) content (i.e., the audio signal is therefore also referred to herein as a “mixed signal”, or an “input (mixed) signal”), and the target signal includes either vocal content or non-vocal content. Also in one example embodiment herein, the non-vocal component is an instrumental component, and the target signal represents an instrumental signal or a vocal signal. According to another example embodiment herein, the method further comprises obtaining the target signal by removing an instrumental component from a signal that includes vocal and instrumental components.

Additionally, in still another example embodiment herein, the method further comprises identifying the audio signal and the target signal as a pair, wherein the identifying includes determining at least one of:

that the audio signal and the target signal relate to a same artist, that a title associated with at least one of the audio signal and the target signal does not include predetermined information, and that durations of the audio signal and the target signal differ by no more than a predetermined length of time.

In one example embodiment herein, the method further comprises converting the audio signal to an image in the neural network system, and the U-Net comprises a convolution path for encoding the image, and a deconvolution path for decoding the image encoded by the convolution path.

The U-Net, in one example embodiment herein, additionally comprises concatenations between the paths (e.g., encoder and decoder paths). Moreover, in one example embodiment herein, the method further comprises applying an output of the deconvolution path as a mask to the image.

A system, method and computer product also are provided herein for estimating a component of a provided audio signal, according to an example aspect herein. The method comprises converting the provided audio signal to an image, and applying the image to a U-Net trained to estimate one of vocal content and instrumental content. The method of this aspect of the present application also comprises converting an output of the U-Net to an output audio signal. The output audio signal represents an estimate of either a vocal component of the provided audio signal or an instrumental component of the provided audio signal, depending on whether the U-Net is trained to estimate the vocal content or the instrumental content, respectively.

According to another example aspect herein, another system, method, and computer product are provided for estimating a component of a provided audio signal. In one example embodiment, the method comprises converting the provided audio signal to an image, and inputting the image to a U-Net trained to estimate different types of content. The different types of content include one or more of vocal content and musical instrument content. In response to the input image, the U-Net outputs signals, each representing a corresponding one of the different types of content. The method also comprises converting each of the signals output by the U-Net to an audio signal.

The U-Net according to this example embodiment preferably comprises a convolution path for encoding the image, and a plurality of deconvolution paths for decoding the image encoded by the convolution path, each of the deconvolution paths corresponding to one of the different types of content.

According to one example embodiment herein, the method further comprises applying an output of at least one of the deconvolution paths as a mask to the image.

The musical instrument content, in one example embodiment, includes different types of musical instrument content, and each of the signals output by the U-Net corresponds to one of the different types of musical instrument content, in a case where the U-Net is trained to estimate the one of the different types of content.

In one example embodiment herein, the different types of musical instrument content include at least some of guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, and/or any other type(s) of musical instrument content.

According to still another example aspect herein, a method, system, and computer program product are provided for training a neural network system. In one example embodiment the method comprises inputting an audio signal to the neural network system to generate a plurality of outputs, the audio signal including different types of content. The different types of content includes one or more of vocal content and musical instrument content, and each output corresponds to a respective one of the different types of content. The method also comprises comparing individual ones of the outputs of the neural network system to corresponding target signals, and, for each individual output compared in the comparing, adjusting at least one parameter of the neural network system to reduce a result of the comparing performed for the individual output, to train the neural network system to estimate the different types of content.

The neural network system includes a U-Net, in one example embodiment herein, and the U-Net comprises a convolution path and a plurality of de-convolution paths.

In one example embodiment herein, the method further comprises obtaining the target signal by removing an instrumental component from a signal that includes vocal and instrumental components.

Also in one example embodiment herein, the musical instrument content includes different types of musical instrument content, such as at least some of guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, and/or any other type(s) of musical instrument content.

Additionally according to an example embodiment herein, the method further comprises converting the audio signal to an image in the neural network system, and applying an output of at least one of the deconvolution paths as a mask to the image.

According to still another example aspect herein, another system, method and computer product are provided for estimating a component of a provided audio signal. The method according to this aspect comprises converting the provided audio signal to an image, processing the image with a neural network trained to estimate one of vocal content and instrumental content, and storing a spectral mask output from the neural network as a result of the image being processed by the neural network. In one example embodiment herein, the neural network is a U-Net, and the method is performed by a media delivery system.

In one example embodiment herein, the method according to the present aspect further comprises providing the spectral mask to a client media playback device. The client media playback device applies the spectral mask to a spectrogram of the provided audio signal, to provide a masked spectrogram, and transforms the masked spectrogram to an audio signal.

According to still a further example aspect herein, still another system, method and computer product are provided for estimating a component of a provided audio signal. The method according to this aspect comprises receiving a spectral mask, the spectral mask being a result of an image processed by a neural network, and applying the spectral mask to the provided audio signal, to provide a masked spectrogram representing an estimate of one of vocal content and instrumental content. The method further comprises transforming the masked spectrogram to an audio signal. In one example embodiment herein, the method is performed by a media playback device, the neural network is a U-Net, and the spectral mask is received from a media delivery system that includes the neural network. Also in one example embodiment herein, the image is an image version of the provided audio signal, and the method further comprises playing back the audio signal obtained in the transforming via an output user interface.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 shows an example of a table that can be employed to implement an example aspect herein, wherein the table includes metadata associated with tracks.

FIG. 2 is a flow diagram of a procedure for identifying matching tracks, according to an example aspect herein.

FIG. 3 is a flow diagram of a procedure for performing a quality check to identify incorrectly matches tracks, and further represents a step 210 of FIG. 2 .

FIG. 4 is a flow diagram of a procedure for estimating a vocal or instrumental component of an audio signal, according to an example aspect herein.

FIG. 5 illustrates a U-Net architecture 500 used in the procedure of FIG. 4 , according to an example aspect herein.

FIG. 6 a is a block diagram of a neural network system that includes a U-Net architecture 500 or 1500, according to example embodiments herein.

FIG. 6 b is a block diagram of a system 650 used to train for estimation of a vocal or instrumental components of an audio signal, according to an example embodiment herein.

FIG. 7 is a flow diagram of a procedure to train for estimation of a vocal or instrumental of an audio signal, according to an example aspect herein.

FIG. 8 is a flow diagram of a procedure for determining a target vocal component for use in the procedure of FIG. 7 .

FIG. 9 a shows example distributions for various models, in relation to an iKala vocal.

FIG. 9 b shows example distributions for various models, in relation to an iKala instrumental.

FIG. 10 a shows an example representation of a masking procedure according to an example aspect herein, involving a U-Net architecture.

FIG. 10 b shows an example representation of a masking procedure according to a known baseline.

FIG. 11 is a block diagram showing an example computation system constructed to realize the functionality of the example embodiments described herein.

FIG. 12 is a screen capture of a CrowdFlower question.

FIG. 13 a shows a mean and standard deviation for answers provided on CrowdFlower, for a MedleyDB vocal.

FIG. 13 b shows a mean and standard deviation for answers provided on CrowdFlower, for a MedleyDB instrumental, compared to existing systems.

FIG. 13 c shows a mean and standard deviation for answers provided on CrowdFlower, for an iKala vocal, compared to existing systems.

FIG. 13 d shows a mean and standard deviation for answers provided on CrowdFlower, for an iKala instrumental, compared to existing systems.

FIG. 14 shows a user interface 1400, including a volume control bar 1408 and a volume control 1409 according to an example aspect herein.

FIG. 15 illustrates a U-Net architecture 1500, according to another example aspect herein.

FIG. 16 is a flow diagram of a procedure for estimating vocal and/or instrumental components of an audio signal, according to another example aspect herein.

FIG. 17 is a flow diagram of a procedure to train for estimation of vocal and/or instrumental components of an audio signal, according to another example aspect herein.

FIG. 18 is a flow diagram of a procedure, performed by a client media playback device, for estimating a vocal or instrumental component of an audio signal, according to an example aspect herein.

FIG. 19 is a block diagram of an example embodiment of a media playback device and a media delivery system.

FIG. 20 is a flow diagram of a procedure, performed by a media delivery system, for providing a spectral mask, according to an example aspect herein.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In the following detailed description, references are made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof, and in which are shown by way of illustrations specific embodiments or examples. These aspects may be combined, other aspects may be utilized, and structural changes may be made without departing from the present disclosure. Embodiments may be practiced as methods, systems or devices. Accordingly, embodiments may take the form of a hardware implementation, an entirely software implementation, or an implementation combining software and hardware aspects. The following detailed description is therefore not to be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope of the present disclosure is defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.

Example aspects described herein address a voice (or other content) separation task, whose domain is often considered from a time-frequency perspective, as the translation of a mixed spectrogram into vocal and instrumental spectrograms. By using this framework, the technology exploits to advantage some advances in image-to-image translation—especially in regard to the reproduction of fine-grained details—for use in blind source separation for music.

The decomposition of a music audio signal into its vocal and backing track components, and/or into individual ones of a plurality of instrument components, is analogous to image-to-image translation, where a mixed spectrogram is transformed into its constituent sources.

According to an example aspect herein, a U-Net architecture—initially developed for medical imaging—is employed for the task of source separation, given its proven capacity for recreating the fine, low-level detail required for high-quality audio reproduction. At least some example embodiments herein, through both quantitative evaluation and subjective assessment, demonstrate that they achieve state-of-the-art performance.

An example aspect described herein adapts a U-Net architecture to the task of content separation. That architecture was introduced originally in biomedical imaging, to improve precision and localization of microscopic images of neuronal structures. The architecture builds upon a fully convolutional network (see, e.g., Reference [14]) and, in one example, may be similar to the deconvolutional network (see, e.g., Reference [19]). In a deconvolutional network, a stack of convolutional layers—where each layer halves the size of an image but doubles the number of channels—encodes the image into a small and deep representation. That encoding is then decoded to the original size of the image by a stack of upsampling layers.

In the reproduction of a natural image, displacements by just one pixel are usually not perceived as major distortions. In the frequency domain, however, even a minor linear shift in a spectrogram may have significant effects on perception. This is particularly relevant in music signals, because of the logarithmic perception of frequency. Moreover, a shift in the time dimension can become audible as jitter and other artifacts. Therefore, it can be useful that a reproduction preserves a high level of detail. According to an example aspect herein, the U-Net architecture herein adds additional skip connections between layers at the same hierarchical level in the encoder and decoder. This enables low-level information to flow directly from the high-resolution input to the high-resolution output.

At least one neural network architecture described herein, according to one example embodiment, can predict vocal and instrumental components of an input signal indirectly. In one example embodiment herein, an output of a final decoder layer is a soft mask that is multiplied element-wise with a mixed spectrogram to obtain a final estimate. Also in one example embodiment herein, separate models are trained for the extraction of instrumental and vocal components, respectively, of a signal, to allow for more divergent training schemes for the models in the future. Also, in one example embodiment herein, models are trained for the extraction of different types of vocal components and instrumental components (e.g., bass, drums, guitar, etc.), to allow for more divergent training schemes for the models in the future. In one example embodiment herein, the neural network model operates exclusively on the magnitude of audio spectrograms. The audio signal for an individual (vocal/instrumental) component is rendered by constructing a spectrogram, wherein the output magnitude is given by applying a mask predicted by the U-Net to the magnitude of the original spectrum, while the output phase is that of the original spectrum, unaltered. Experimental results presented below indicate that such a simple methodology proves effective.

Dataset

According to an example aspect herein, the model architecture can employ training data available in the form of a triplet (original signal, vocal component, instrumental component), and the instrumental component may include one or more types of instrumental components (e.g., guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, and/or any other type of non-vocal content). However, in the event that vast amounts of unmixed multi-track recordings are not available, an alternative strategy according to an example aspect herein can be employed to mine for matching or candidate pairs of tracks, to obtain training data. For example, it is not uncommon for artists to release instrumental versions of tracks along with the original mix. An instrumental track may include one or more of various types of instrumental content, such as, by example and without limitation, guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, and/or any other type of non-vocal content (although in other example embodiments, an instrumental track may include, at least in part, vocal content processed through an instrument or synthesizer). In accordance with one example aspect herein, pairs of (original, instrumental) tracks from a large commercial music database are retrieved. Candidates are found by examining associated metadata for tracks with, in one example embodiment, matching duration and artist information, where the track title (fuzzily) matches except for the string “Instrumental” occurring in exactly one title in the pair. The pool of tracks is pruned by excluding exact content matches. In one example, such procedures are performed according to the technique described in Reference [10], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein. The approach enables a large source of X (mixed) and Y_(i) (instrumental) magnitude spectrogram pairs to be provided. A vocal magnitude spectrogram Y_(v) is obtained from their half-wave rectified difference. In one example, a final dataset included approximately 20,000 track pairs, resulting in almost two months-worth of continuous audio, which is perhaps the largest training data set ever applied to musical source separation. Table A below shows a relative distribution of frequent genres in the dataset, obtained from catalog metadata.

TABLE A Training data genre distribution Genre Percentage Pop 26.0% Rap 21.3% Dance & House 14.2% Electronica  7.4% R&B  3.9% Rock  3.6% Alternative  3.1% Children's  2.5% Metal  2.5% Latin  2.3% Indie Rock  2.2% Other 10.9%

Selection of Matching Recordings

The manner in which candidate recording pairs are formed using a method according to an example embodiment herein will now be described, with reference to the flow diagram of FIG. 2 . The method (also referred to herein as a “procedure”) 200 commences at step 202. According to one example embodiment herein, in step 204 a search is performed based on a set of tracks (e.g., a set of ten million commercially recorded tracks) stored in one or more databases to determine tracks that match (step 206), such as one or more matching pairs of tracks (A, B). Each track may include, for example, information representing instrumental and vocal activity (if any), and an associated string of metadata which can be arranged in a table of a database. For example, as shown in the example table depicted in FIG. 1 , the metadata for each track (e.g., track1, track2 . . . track-n) can include various types of identifying information, such as, by example and without limitation, the track title 100, artist name 102, track duration 104, the track type 106 (e.g., whether the track is “instrumental”, and/or the type of instrumental track (e.g., “multi-instrumental” track, “guitar” track, “bass” track, “drum” track, “piano” track, etc.), whether the track is “original” and/or “mixed, original”, whether the track is “vocal”, or the like), arranged by columns in the table. In one example embodiment herein, step 204 includes evaluating the metadata for each track to match (in step 206) all tracks that meet predetermined criteria. For example, in the example embodiment herein, the matching of step 206 is performed based on the metadata identifying information (i.e., track titles, artist names, track durations etc.) about the tracks, to match and identify all tracks (A, B) determined to meet the following criteria:

-   -   tracks A and B are recorded by a same artist;     -   the term “instrumental” (or an indication of instrument type)         does not appear in the title (or type) of track A;     -   the term “instrumental” (or an indication of instrument type)         does appear in the title (or type) of track B;     -   the titles of tracks A and B are fuzzy matches; and     -   the track durations of tracks A and B differ by less than a         predetermined time value (e.g., 10 seconds).

According to one example embodiment herein, the fuzzy matching is performed on track titles by first formatting them to a standardized format, by, for example, latinizing non-ASCII characters, removing parenthesized text, and then converting the result to lower-case text. In one example, this process yields about 164 k instrumental tracks, although this example is non-limiting. Also in one example embodiment herein, the method may provide a 1:n, n:n, or many-to-many mapping, in that an original song version may match to several different instrumentals or types of instrumental (e.g., one of a guitar track, a bass track, drum track, piano track, or the like) in step 206, and vice versa. Thus, although described herein in terms of an example case where tracks A and B can be matched, the invention is not so limited, and it is within the scope of the invention for more than two tracks to be matched together in step 206, and for more than two or a series of tracks to be matched in step 206. For example, multiple pairs or multiples series of tracks can be matched in that step.

In step 208, matching versions of a track, such as a pair of tracks (A, B) that were matched in step 206, are marked or otherwise designated (e.g., in a memory) as being either “instrumental” or “original”, based on whether or not the term “instrumental” (or an indication of instrument type) appears in the metadata associated with those tracks. In the present example wherein the metadata of track A does not indicate that it is an instrumental (and does not indicate an instrument type), and where the metadata of track B does indicate that track B is an instrumental (and/or indicates an instrument type), then the matching tracks (A, B) are marked as “(original, instrumental)”. In another example, in step 208, matching versions of a track, such as a pair of tracks (A, B) that were matched in step 206, are marked or otherwise designated (e.g., in a memory) as being either a specific type of instrumental (e.g., “guitar”, “bass”, “drums”, “piano” or the like) or “original”, based on whether or not a term representing the specific type of instrumental appears in the metadata associated with those tracks. In the present example wherein the metadata of track A does not indicate that it is an instrumental, and where the metadata of track B does indicate that track B is a type of instrumental, then the matching tracks (A, B) are marked as “(original, instrumental type)”, wherein “instrumental type” may indicate, in one example embodiment, “guitar instrumental”, “bass instrumental”, “drum instrumental”, “piano instrumental”, or any other type of instrument type, depending on the instrumental type indicated by the metadata of track B.

In one example embodiment herein, at least some of the results of step 206 can be evaluated manually (or automatically) to check for quality in step 210, since it may occur that some tracks were matched that should not have been matched. In general, such undesired matching can be a result of one or more errors, such as, for example, instrumental tracks appearing on multiple albums (such as compilations or movie soundtracks, where the explicit description of the track as “instrumental” may be warranted by the context). Pairs that are suspected of being incorrectly matched can be identified using a procedure according to an example aspect herein. For example an audio fingerprinting algorithm can be used to remove suspect pairs from the candidate set. In one example embodiment, that step is performed using an open-source fingerprinting algorithm, and the procedure described in Reference [34], can be employed although in other embodiments other types of algorithms can be employed. Reference [34] is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein.

In one example embodiment, step 210 is performed according to procedure 300 illustrated in FIG. 3 . Referring now to FIG. 3 , for each matched track A and B a code sequence is computed using, in one example, a fingerprinting algorithm (step 302). Any suitable type of known fingerprinting algorithm for generating a code sequence based on a track can be employed. Next, in step 304 the code sequences for the respective, matched tracks A and B are compared using, in one example embodiment herein, a Jaccard similarity. If sequences are determined based on the Jaccard similarity to overlap within a predetermined range of acceptability (“Yes” in step 306), then the corresponding tracks are identified as being correctly matched in step 308. The predetermined range of acceptability can be defined by upper and lower boundaries of acceptability.

If, on the other hand, the comparison performed in step 304 results in a determination that the code sequences do not overlap within the predetermined range of acceptability (“No” in step 306), then in step 310 the tracks are determined to be matched incorrectly, and thus at least one of them is removed from the results (step 312), and only those that remain are deemed to be correctly matched (step 308). A determination of “No” in step 306 may be a result of, for example, the codes not overlapping enough (e.g., owing to an erroneous fuzzy metadata match), or the codes overlapping too much (i.e., beyond the predetermined range of acceptability), which may occur in cases where, for example, the tracks are identical (e.g., the tracks are both instrumental, or are both of a same instrument type, or are both vocal or of the same vocal type).

The performance of step 312 may result in the removal of both tracks A and B, in certain situations. However, in the case for a 1:n, n:n, or many-to-many matching in earlier step 206, then only those tracks B which were determined to be matched with track A incorrectly are removed in step 312. In one example embodiment herein, step 312 is performed so that each original track is linked to only one non-redundant, instrumental track. The result of the performance of step 312 in that embodiment is that only pair(s) of tracks A, B deemed to match within the predetermined range of acceptability remain (step 308).

In one sample case where 10 million commercially available tracks are evaluated using the procedures 200 and 300, the processes yielded roughly 24,000 tracks, or 12,000 original-instrumental pairs, totaling about 1500 hours of audio track durations. 24,000 strongly labeled tracks were obtained for use as a training dataset.

Estimation of Vocal Activity

Before describing how matches tracks A, B are employed for training according to an example aspect herein, the manner in which vocal or non-vocal activity can be separated from a track and/or predicted, according to an example aspect herein, will first be described. FIG. 4 is a flow diagram of a procedure 400 according to an example embodiment herein, and FIG. 6 a shows a block diagram of an example embodiment of a neural network system 600 for performing the procedure 400. For purposes of the following description, T^(O) and T^(I) are employed to denote tracks, in particular, an “original” (“mixed”) track and an “instrumental” track, respectively, that are available, and it is assumed that it is desired to obtain the vocal and/or instrumental component of a provided “original” (“mixed”) track (also referred to as a “mixed original signal”). Generally, the procedure 400 according to the present example aspect of the present application includes computing a Time-Frequency Representation (TFR) for the tracks T^(O) and T^(I) using a TFR obtainer 602, to yield corresponding TFRs X^(O) and X^(I), respectively, in the frequency domain (step 402), wherein the TFRs X^(O) and X^(I) each are a spectrogram of 2D coefficients, having frequency and phase content, and then performing steps 404 to 410 as will be described below. It should be noted that, although described herein in the context of steps 402 to 405 being performed together for both types of tracks T^(O) and T^(I) (i.e., an “original” track and an “instrumental” track), the scope of the invention herein is not so limited, and in other example embodiments herein, those steps 402 to 405 may be performed separately for each separate type of track. In other example embodiments, steps 402 to 405 are performed for the “original” (“mixed”) track, such as, for example, in a case where it is desired to predict or isolate the instrumental or vocal component of the track, and steps 402 to 405 are performed separately for the instrumental track, for use in training (to be described below) to enable the prediction/isolation to occur. In one example, step 402 is performed according to the procedures described in Reference [39], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein.

At step 404, the pair of TFRs (X^(O), X^(I)) obtained in step 402 undergoes a conversion (by polar coordinate converter 604) to polar coordinates including magnitude and phase components, representing a frequency intensity at different points in time. The conversion produces corresponding spectrogram components (Z^(O), Z^(I)), wherein the components (Z^(O), Z^(I)) are a version of the pair of TFRs (X^(O), XI) that has been converted in step 404 into a magnitude and phase representation of the pair of TFRs, and define intensity of frequency at different points in time. The magnitude is the absolute value of a complex number, and the phase is the angle of the complex number. In step 405, patches are extracted from the spectrogram components (Z^(O), Z^(I)) using patch extractor 606. In one example embodiment herein, step 405 results in slices of the spectrograms from step 404 (by way of polar coordinate converter 604) being obtained along a time axis, wherein the slices are fixed sized images (such as, e.g., 512 bins and 128 frames), according to one non-limiting and non-exclusive example embodiment herein. Patches can be obtained based on the magnitude of components (Z^(O), Z^(I))(wherein such patches also are hereinafter referred to as “magnitude patches (MP^(O),MP^(I))” or ““magnitude spectrogram patches (MP^(O),MP^(I))”)). In one example, step 405 is performed according to the procedures described in the Reference [38], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein.

In a next step 406, the magnitude patch (MP( ) (e.g., the original mix spectrogram magnitude) obtained in step 405 is applied to a pre-trained network architecture 500, wherein, according to one example aspect herein, the network architecture is a U-Net architecture. For purposes of this description, reference numeral “500” is used in conjunction with the terms “architecture”, “network architecture”, “U-Net”, “U-Net architecture”, and the like, each of which terms is used interchangeably herein to refer to the same element. Also, for purposes of the present description of FIG. 4 , it is assumed that the U-Net architecture is pre-trained according to, in one example embodiment, procedure 700 to be described below in conjunction with FIG. 7 . In one example embodiment herein, the network architecture 500 is similar to the network architecture disclosed in Reference [11] and/or Reference [24], which are incorporated by reference herein in their entireties, as if set forth fully herein, although these examples are non-exclusive and non-limiting.

FIG. 5 illustrates in more detail one example of U-Net architecture 500 that can be employed according to an example aspect herein. The architecture 500 comprises a contracting (encoder) path 502 and an expansive (decoder) path 504. In one example embodiment herein, the contracting path 502 can be similar to an architecture of a convolutional network, and includes repeated application of two 3×3 convolutions (unpadded convolutions), and a rectified linear unit (ReLU). More particularly, in the illustrated embodiment, contracting path 502 comprises an input layer 502 a representing an input image slice, wherein the input image slice is the magnitude patch (MP^(O)) obtained from step 405. Contracting path 502 also comprises a plurality of downsampling layers 502 b to 502 n, where, in one example embodiment herein, n equals 5, and each downsampling layer 502 b to 502 n performs a 2D convolution that halves the number of feature channels. For convenience, each layer 502 b to 502 n is represented by a corresponding image slice, Also in the illustrated embodiment, expansive path 504 comprises a plurality of upsampling layers 504 a to 504 n, wherein, in one example embodiment herein, n equals 5 and each upsampling layer 504 a to 504 n performs a 2D deconvolution that doubles the number of feature channels, and where at least some of the layers 504 a to 504 n, such as, e.g., layers 504 a to 504 c, also perform spatial dropout. Additionally, a layer 506 is included in the architecture 500, and can be said to be within each path 502 and 504 as shown. According to one example embodiment herein, contracting path 502 operates according to that described in Reference [36], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein, although that example is non-exclusive and non-limiting.

Also in one example embodiment herein, each layer of path 502 includes a strided 2D convolution of stride 2 and kernel size 5×5, batch normalization, and leaky rectified linear units (ReLU) with leakiness 0.2. The layers of path 504 employ strided deconvolution (also referred to as “transposed convolution”) with stride 2 and kernel size 5×5, batch normalization, plain ReLU, and a 50% dropout (in the first three layers). In at least the final layer (e.g., layer 504 n), a sigmoid activation function can be employed, in one example embodiment herein.

Each downsampling layer 502 b to 502 n reduces in half the number of bins and frames, while increasing the number of feature channels. For example, where the input image of layer 502 a is a 512×128×1 image slice (where 512 represents the number of bins, 128 represents the number of frames, and 1 represents the number of channels), application of that image slice to layer 502 b results in a 256×64×16 image slice. Application of that 256×64×16 image slice to layer 502 c results in a 128×32×32 image slice, and application of the 128×32×32 image slice to subsequent layer 502 d results in a 64×16×64 image slice. Similarly, application of the 64×16×64 image slice to subsequent layer 502 e results in a 32×8×128 image slice, and application of the 32×8×128 image slice to layer 502 n results in a 16×4×256 image slice. Similarly, application of the 64×4×256 image slice to layer 506 results in a 8×2×512 image slice. Of course, the foregoing values are examples only, and the scope of the invention is not limited thereto.

Each layer in the expansive path 504 upsamples the (feature map) input received thereby followed by a 2×2 convolution (“up-convolution”) that doubles the number of bins and frames, while reducing the number of channels. Also, a concatenation with the correspondingly cropped feature map from the contracting path is provided, and two 3×3 convolutions, each followed by a ReLU.

In an example aspect herein, concatenations are provided by connections between corresponding layers of the paths 502 and 504, to concatenate post-convoluted channels to the layers in path 504. This feature is because, in at least some cases, when an image slice is provided through the path 504, at least some details of the image may be lost. As such, predetermined features 510 (such as, e.g., features which preferably are relatively unaffected by non-linear transforms) from each post-convolution image slice in the path 502 are provided to the corresponding layer of path 504, where the predetermined features are employed along with the image slice received from a previous layer in the path 504 to generate the corresponding expanded image slice for the applicable layer, and the predetermined features also are referred to herein as “concatenation features 510”. More particularly, in the illustrated embodiment, the 8×2×512 image slice obtained from layer 506, and concatenation features 510 from layer 502 n, are applied to the layer 504 a, resulting in a 16×4×256 image slice being provided, which is then applied along with concatenation features 510 from layer 502 e to layer 504 b, resulting in a 32×8×128 image slice being provided. Application of that 32×8×128 image slice, along with concatenation features 510 from layer 502 d, to layer 504 c results in a 64×16×64 image slice, which is then applied along with concatenation features 510 from layer 502 c to layer 504 d, resulting in a 128×32×32 image slice being provided. That latter image slice is then applied, along with concatenation features 510 from layer 502 b, to layer 504 e, resulting in a 256×16×16 image slice being provided, which, after being applied to layer 504 n, results in a 512×128×1 image slice being provided. In one example embodiment herein, cropping may be performed to compensate for any loss of border pixels in every convolution.

Having described the architecture 500 of FIG. 5 , the next step of the procedure 400 of FIG. 4 will now be described. In step 408, the output of layer 504 n is employed as a mask for being applied by mask combiner 608 to the input image of layer 502 a, to provide an estimated magnitude spectrogram 508, which, in an example case where the architecture 500 is trained to predict/isolate an instrumental component of a mixed original signal, is an estimated instrumental magnitude spectrum (of course, in another example case where the architecture 500 is trained to predict/isolate a vocal component of a mixed original signal, the spectrogram is an estimated vocal magnitude spectrum). That step 408 is performed to combine the image (e.g., preferably a magnitude component) from layer 504 n with the phase component from the mixed original spectrogram (of layer 502 a) to provide a complex value spectrogram having both phase and magnitude components (i.e., to render independent of the amplitude of the original spectrogram). Step 408 may be performed in accordance with any suitable technique.

The result of step 408 is then applied in step 410 to an inverse Short Time Fourier Transform (ISTFT) component 610 to transform (by way of a ISTFT) the result of step 408 from the frequency domain, into an audio signal in the time domain (step 410). In a present example where it is assumed that the architecture 500 is trained to learn/predict instrumental components of input signals (i.e., the mixed original signal, represented by the component MP^(O) applied in step 406), the audio signal resulting from step 410 is an estimated instrumental audio signal. For example, the estimated instrumental audio signal represents an estimate of the instrumental portion of the mixed original signal first applied to the system 600 in step 402. In the foregoing manner, the instrumental component of a mixed original signal that includes both vocal and instrumental components can be obtained/predicted/isolated.

To obtain the vocal component of the mixed original signal, a method according to the foregoing procedure 400 is performed using system 600, but for a case where the architecture 500 is trained (e.g., in a manner as will be described later) for learn/predict vocal components of mixed signals. For example, the procedure for obtaining the vocal component includes performing steps 402 to 410 in the manner described above, except that, in one example embodiment, the U-Net architecture 500 employed in step 406 has been trained for estimating a vocal component of mixed original signals applied to the system 600. As a result of the performance of procedure 400 for such a case, the spectrogram 508 obtained in step 408 is an estimated vocal magnitude spectrum, and the audio signal obtained in step 410 is an estimated vocal audio signal, which represents an estimate of the vocal component of the mixed original signal applied to system 600 in step 402 (and an estimate of the component MP(applied to the architecture 500 in step 406).

Dataset

In one example embodiment herein, the model architecture assumes that training data is available in the form of a triplet (mixed original signal, vocal component, instrumental component), as would be the case in which, for example, access is available to vast amounts of unmixed multi-track recordings. In other example embodiments herein, an alternative strategy is provided to provide data for training a model. For example, one example solution exploits a specific but large set of commercially available recordings in order to “construct” training data: instrumental versions of recordings. Indeed, in one example embodiment, the training data is obtained in the manner described above in connection with FIGS. 1-3 .

Training

In one example embodiment herein, the model herein can be trained using an ADAM optimizer. One example of an ADAM optimizer that can be employed is described in Reference [12], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein, although this example is non-limiting and non-exclusive. Given the heavy computational requirements of training such a model, in one example embodiment herein, input audio is downsampled to 8192 Hz in order to speed up processing. Then, a Short Time Fourier Transform is computed with a window size of 1024 and a hop length of 768 frames, and patches of, e.g., 128 frames (roughly 11 seconds) are extracted, which then are fed as input and targets to the architecture 500. Also in this example embodiment, the magnitude spectrograms are normalized to the range [0, 1]. Of course, these examples are non-exclusive and non-limiting.

The manner in which training is performed, according to an example embodiment herein, will now be described in greater detail, with reference to FIGS. 6 b and 7. In the present example embodiment, it is assumed that it is desired to train the architecture 500 to learn to predict/isolate an instrumental component of mixed original signals p used as training data, wherein, in one example embodiment, the mixed original signals e used for training are “original” tracks A such as those identified as being correct matches with corresponding “instrumental” tracks B in step 308 of FIG. 3 described above. Referring to FIG. 6 b , the system 600 is shown, along with additional elements including a loss calculator 612 and a parameter adapter 614. The system 600, loss calculator 612, and parameter adapter 614 form a training system 650. The system 600 of FIG. 6 b is the same as that of FIG. 6 a , except that the architecture 500 is assumed not to be trained, in the present example, at least at the start of procedure 700.

In one example embodiment herein, in step 702 the system 600 of FIG. 6 b is fed with short time fragments of at least one signal φ, and the system 600 operates as described above and according to steps 402 to 410 of FIG. 4 described above, in response to the signal φ(except that the architecture 500 is assumed not to be fully trained yet). For each instance of the signal φ applied to the system 600 of FIG. 6 b , the system 600 provides an output f(X, Θ) from the mask combiner 608, to the loss calculator 612. Also, input to the loss calculator 612, according to an example embodiment herein, is a signal Y, which represents the magnitude of the spectrogram of the target audio. For example, in a case where it is desired to train the architecture to predict/isolate an instrumental component of an original mixed signal (such as a track “A”), then the target audio is the “instrumental” track B (from step 308) corresponding thereto, and the magnitude of the spectrogram of that track “B” is obtained for use as signal Y via application of a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) thereto. In step 704 the loss calculator 612 employs a loss function to determine how much difference there is between the output f(X, Θ) and the target, which, in this case, is the target instrumental (i.e., the magnitude of the spectrogram of the track “B”). In one example embodiment herein, the loss function is the L_(l,t) norm (e.g., wherein the norm of a matrix is the sum of the absolute values of its elements) of a difference between the target spectrogram and the masked input spectrogram, as represented by the following formula (F1):

L(X,Y;Θ)=∥f(X,Θ)⊗X−Y∥  (F1)

where X denotes the magnitude of the spectrogram of the original, mixed signal (e.g., including both vocal and instrumental components), Y denotes the magnitude of the spectrogram of the target instrumental (or vocal, where a vocal signal is used instead) audio (wherein Y may be further represented by either Yv for a vocal component or Yi for an instrumental component of the input signal), f(X, Θ) represents an output of mask combiner 608, and Θ represents the U-Net (or parameters thereof). For the case where the U-Net is trained to predict instrumental spectrograms, denotation Θ may be further represented by Θ_(i) (whereas for the case where the U-Net is trained to predict vocal spectrograms, denotation Θ may be further represented by Θ_(v)) In the above formula F1, the expression f(X, Θ)⊗X represents masking of the magnitude X (by mask combiner 608) using the version of the magnitude X after being applied to the U-Net 500.

A result of formula F1 is provided from loss calculator 612 to parameter adaptor 614, which, based on the result, varies one or more parameters of the architecture 500, if needed, to reduce the loss value (represented by L(X, Y; Θ)) (step 706). Procedure 700 can be performed again in as many iterations as needed to substantially reduce or minimize the loss value, in which case the architecture 500 is deemed trained. For example, in step 708 it is determined whether the loss value is sufficiently minimized. If “yes” in step 708, then the method ends at step 710 and the architecture is deemed trained. If “no” in step 708, then control passes back to step 702 where the procedure 700 is performed again as many times as needed until the loss value is deemed sufficiently minimized.

The manner in which the parameter adapter 614 varies the parameters of the architecture 500 in step 706 can be in accordance with any suitable technique, such as, by example and without limitation, that disclosed in Reference [36], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein. In one example embodiment, step 706 may involve altering one or more weights, kernels, and/or other applicable parameter values of the architecture 500, and can include performing a stochastic gradient descent algorithm.

A case where it is desired to train the architecture 500 to predict a vocal component of a mixed original signal will now be described. In this example embodiment, the procedure 700 is performed in the same manner as described above, except that the signal Y provided to the loss calculator 612 is a target vocal signal corresponding to the mixed original signal(s) T (track(s) A) input to the system 650 (i.e., the target vocal signal and mixed original signal are deemed to be a match). The target vocal signal may be obtained from a database of such signals, if available (and a magnitude of the spectrogram thereof can be employed). In other example embodiments, and referring to the procedure 800 of FIG. 8 , the target vocal signal is obtained by determining the half-wave difference between the spectrogram of the mixed original signal (i.e., the magnitude component of the spectrogram, which preferably is representation after the time-frequency conversion via STFT by TFR obtainer 602, polar coordinate conversion via converter 604, and extraction using extractor 606) and the corresponding instrumental spectrogram (i.e., of the instrumental signal paired with the mixed original signal, from the training set, to yield the target vocal signal (step 802). The instrumental spectrogram is preferably a representation of the mixed original signal after the time-frequency conversion via STFT by TFR obtainer 602, polar coordinate conversion via converter 604, and extraction using extractor 606). For either of the above example scenarios for obtaining the target vocal signal, and referring again to FIGS. 6 b and 7, the target vocal signal is applied as signal Y to the loss calculator 612, resulting in the loss calculator 612 employing the above formula F1 (i.e., the loss function) to determine how much difference there is between the output f(X, Θ) and the target (signal Y) (step 704). A result of formula F1 in step 704 is provided from loss calculator 612 to parameter adaptor 614, which, based on the result, varies one or more parameters of the architecture 500, if needed, to reduce the loss value L(X, Y; Θ) (step 706). Again, procedure can be performed again in as many iterations as needed (as determined in step 708) to substantially reduce or minimize the loss value, in which case the architecture 500 is deemed trained to predict a vocal component of a mixed original input signal (step 710).

The above example embodiments are described in the context of separating/isolating and/or predicting a vocal or instrumental component from a mixed, original signal (mixed music track), in another example embodiment herein, instead of separating/isolating and/or predicting a vocal or instrumental component from a mixed, original signal, in another example embodiment herein, the above method(s), architecture 500, and systems (FIGS. 6 a and 6 b ) can be employed to (learn to and then) separate/isolate/predict different types of instrumental components, such as, by example and without limitation, components including content of one or more types of instruments such as guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, or the like. For example, the architecture 500 and system 600 can be trained in a similar manner as described above (FIG. 7 ) for training the architecture 500/system 600 to learn an instrumental component, but for a case where the instrumental component includes a particular type of instrument content (e.g., guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, or the like) (i.e., in such an example case, during training the target signal Y would include that particular type of instrument content, and, in one example, may be obtained from a database of such signals, and/or can be obtained otherwise as described above (FIG. 8 )). As a result, the architecture 500 and system 600 would become trained to learn that particular type of instrument component, and then, during real-time application (e.g., of procedure 400), the architecture 500/system 600 would respond to an input original, mixed signal by isolating/estimating/predicting the instrument component of the signal. Also, in one example embodiment, in lieu of training of the architecture 500 (and system 600) to learn a vocal component, the architecture 500 and system 600 can be trained to learn a further particular type of instrument component (a different type of instrument component than the foregoing type). Again, for training, in such an example case the target signal Y would include that further type of instrument component. Thus, the architecture 500 and system 600 can be trained to learn different types of instrument components (e.g., components having guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, or the like, respectively). As a result, when an original, mixed signal is applied to the architecture 500 and system 600 during real-time application of procedure 400, the different types of instrumental component(s) (e.g., a component including guitar content, a component including bass content, a component including drum content, and the like) of the signal can be estimated/isolated/predicted from the signal, using the procedure 400 and trained architecture 500.

In a case where it is desired to train the architecture 500 (and system 600) to estimate various types of vocal components, the procedure 700 is performed using system 600, but using target vocal signals (as signal Y) corresponding to the different types of vocal components (in one example embodiment herein, the target signals may be obtained from a database of such signals, or can be obtained in another manner as described above). As but one non-limiting example, the procedure 700 can be performed as described above but 1) for a case where a first target vocal signal Y is a vocal component from singer A, 2) for another case where a second target vocal signal Y is a vocal component from singer B, 3) for another case where a third target vocal signal Y is a vocal component from singer C, and/or the like. As a result, the architecture 500 can become trained to estimate/predict/isolate different types of vocal components from different singers, in one non-limited example herein.

Estimation of (Multiple) Instrument and/or Vocal Content

The above example embodiments are described in the context of separating/isolating and/or predicting a vocal or instrumental component from a mixed original signal (mixed music track). In one example embodiment herein, the instrumental component may include instrumental content, such as, by example and without limitation, content of one or more types of instruments such as guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, or the like. In another, present example aspect herein, respective different types of instrument content, and/or vocal content, can be separated/isolated and/or predicted from a mixed original signal, according to another example embodiment herein. This example aspect will now be described, with reference to FIG. 15 , which shows an example U-Net architecture 1500 according to an example embodiment herein. For purposes of this description, reference numeral “1500” is used in conjunction with the terms “architecture”, “network architecture”, “U-Net”, “U-Net architecture”, and the like, each of which terms is used interchangeably herein to refer to the same element. In the illustrated embodiment represented in FIG. 15 , the architecture 1500 comprises a contracting (encoder) path 1502 and a plurality of expansive (decoder or decoding) paths 1504-1 to 1504-x. In one example embodiment herein, the contracting path 1502 can be similar to an architecture of a convolutional network, and includes repeated application of two 3×3 convolutions (unpadded convolutions), and a rectified linear unit (ReLU). More particularly, in the illustrated embodiment, contracting path 1502 comprises an input layer 1502 a representing an input image slice, wherein the input image slice is the magnitude patch (MP^(O)) obtained from step 1605 described below. The contracting path 1502 also comprises a plurality of downsampling layers 1502 b to 1502 n, where, in one example embodiment herein, n equals 5, and each downsampling layer 1502 b to 1502 n performs a 2D convolution that halves the number of feature channels. For convenience, each layer 1502 b to 1502 n is represented by a corresponding image slice. Also in the illustrated embodiment, each expansive path 1504-1 to 1504-x comprises a plurality of upsampling layers 1504 a to 1504 n, wherein, in one example embodiment herein, n equals 5 and each upsampling layer 1504 a to 1504 n performs a 2D deconvolution that doubles the number of feature channels, and where at least some of the layers 1504 a to 1504 n, such as, e.g., layers 1504 a to 1504 c, also perform spatial dropout. Layer 1508 of each expansive path 1504-a to 1504-x represents a result of applying an output of layer 1502 n of the path as a mask to the input image slice of input layer 1502 a, as will be explained below. According to one example embodiment herein, contracting path 1502 operates according to that described in Reference [36], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein, although that example is non-exclusive and non-limiting.

Also in one example embodiment herein, each layer of path 1502 includes a strided 2D convolution of stride 2 and kernel size 5×5, batch normalization, and leaky rectified linear units (ReLU) with leakiness 0.2. The layers of each path 1504-1 to 1504-x employ strided deconvolution (also referred to as “transposed convolution”) with stride 2 and kernel size 5×5, batch normalization, plain ReLU, and a 50% dropout (in the first three layers). In at least the final layer (e.g., layer 1504 n), a sigmoid activation function can be employed, in one example embodiment herein.

Each downsampling layer 1502 b to 1502 n reduces in half the number of bins and frames, while increasing the number of feature channels. For example, where the input image of layer 1502 a is a 512×128×1 image slice (where 512 represents the number of bins, 128 represents the number of frames, and 1 represents the number of channels), application of that image slice to layer 1502 b results in a 256×64×16 image slice. Application of that 256×64×16 image slice to layer 1502 c results in a 128×32×32 image slice, and application of the 128×32×32 image slice to subsequent layer 1502 d results in a 64×16×64 image slice. Similarly, application of the 64×16×64 image slice to subsequent layer 1502 e results in a 32×8×128 image slice, and application of the 32×8×128 image slice to layer 1502 n results in a 16×4×256 image slice. Of course, the foregoing values are examples only, and the scope of the invention is not limited thereto.

Each expansive path 1504-1 to 1504-x is pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate, and thus corresponds to, a particular type of component, in one example embodiment herein. As but one non-limiting example, and merely for purposes of illustration, the expansive paths 1504-1 to 1504-x are pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate vocals, guitar, bass, drums, and other (e.g., piano) instrument (content) components, respectively, although this example is not limiting, and the paths 1504-1 to 1504-x may correspond to other types of instrument components instead.

Each layer 1504 a to 1504 n in respective ones of the expansive paths 1504-1 to 1504-x upsamples the (feature map) input received thereby followed by a 2×2 convolution (“up-convolution”) that doubles the number of bins and frames, while reducing the number of channels. Also, a concatenation with the correspondingly cropped feature map from a corresponding layer of the contracting path can be provided, and two 3×3 convolutions, each followed by a ReLU.

In an example aspect herein, concatenations are provided by connections between corresponding layers of the path 1502 and paths 1504-1 to 1504-x, to concatenate post-convoluted channels to the layers in respective paths 1504-1 to 1504-x (as described above for FIG. 5 ). This feature is because, in at least some cases, when an image slice is provided through the respective paths 1504-1 to 1504-x, at least some details of the image may be lost. As such, predetermined features (such as, e.g., features which preferably are relatively unaffected by non-linear transforms) from each post-convolution image slice in the path 1502 are provided to the corresponding layer (e.g., among layers 1504 a to 1504 e) of a respect path 1504-1 to 1504-x, where the predetermined features are employed along with the image slice received from a previous layer in the path 1504-1 to 1504-x to generate the corresponding expanded image slice for the applicable layer. More particularly, in one example embodiment, concatenation features from layer 1502 n, are applied to the layer 1504 a of at least one corresponding path 1504-1 to 1504-x, resulting in a 16×4×256 image slice being provided, which is then applied along with concatenation features from layer 1502 e to layer 1504 b, resulting in a 32×8×128 image slice being provided. Application of that 32×8×128 image slice, along with concatenation features from layer 1502 d, to layer 1504 c results in a 64×16×64 image slice, which is then applied along with concatenation features from layer 1502 c to layer 1504 d, resulting in a 128×32×32 image slice being provided. That latter image slice is then applied, along with concatenation features from layer 1502 b, to layer 1504 e, resulting in a 256×16×16 image slice being provided, and the like. In one example embodiment herein, cropping may be performed to compensate for any loss of border pixels in every convolution. Of course, the above examples are illustrative in nature, and the scope of the invention is not limited thereto.

In a present example embodiment herein, the U-Net architecture that is included in the system 600 of FIGS. 6 a and 6 b and the system 650 of FIG. 6 b is the U-Net architecture 1500 (versus architecture 500), as represented by reference number 1500 in FIGS. 6 a and 6 b.

Reference will now be made to FIG. 16 , which is a flow diagram of a procedure (also referred to as a “method”)1600 according to an example embodiment herein, in conjunction with FIG. 6 a , for a description of a real-time application of the system 600. In the example embodiment wherein the system 600 of FIG. 6 a includes the architecture 1500, the system 600 can perform the procedure 1600. Again, for purposes of the following description, TO and TI are employed to denote tracks, in particular, an “original” (“mixed”) track and an “instrumental” track, respectively, that are available, and it is assumed that it is desired to obtain/estimate/predict the vocal and/or at least one predetermined type of instrument component of a provided “original” (“mixed”) track (also referred to as a “mixed original signal”). By way of illustration only, it is assumed that it is desired to separately isolate a vocal component, and/or respective ones of a plurality of types of instrument types (e.g., guitar content, bass content, drum content, piano content, or the like) from the provided “original” (“mixed”) track. As such, in one merely illustrative and non-limiting example, the instrumental track T^(I) is assumed to be one of a “guitar” track including guitar content, a “bass” track including bass content, a “drum” track including drum content, a “piano” track including piano content, or the like. Also by example, and as explained above, the expansive path 1504-1 of U-Net architecture 1500 is pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate a vocal component, and the expansive paths 1504-2 to 1504-x are pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate respective types of instrument components. As but one non-limiting example, the expansive paths 1504-2 to 1504-x are deemed to correspond to guitar, bass, drums, and piano instrument components, respectively, although this example is not limiting, and, in other examples, the expansive paths 1504-1 to 1504-x may correspond to other types of components instead.

Generally, the procedure 1600 according to the present example aspect of the present application includes computing a Time-Frequency Representation (TFR) for the tracks T^(O) and T^(I), using TFR obtainer 602, to yield corresponding TFRs X^(O) and X^(I), respectively, in the frequency domain (step 1602), wherein the TFRs X^(O) and X each are a spectrogram of 2D coefficients, having frequency and phase content, and then performing steps 1604 to 1610 as will be described below. It should be noted that, although described herein in the context of steps 1602 to 1605 being performed together for both types of tracks T^(O) and T^(I) (i.e., an “original” track and an “instrumental” track), the scope of the invention herein is not so limited, and in other example embodiments herein, those steps 1602 to 1605 may be performed separately for each separate type of track. In other example embodiments, steps 1602 to 1605 are performed for the “original” (“mixed”) track, such as, for example, in a case where it is desired to predict or isolate various instrumental and/or vocal components of the track, and steps 1602 to 1605 are performed separately for at least one instrumental track, for use in training (to be described below) to enable the prediction/isolation to occur. Thus, during real-time application, procedure 1600 need not be performed for the track T^(I). In one example, step 1602 is performed according to the procedures described in Reference [39], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein.

At step 1604, the pair of TFRs (X^(O), X^(I)) obtained in step 1602 undergoes a conversion (by polar coordinate converter 604) to polar coordinates including magnitude and phase components, representing a frequency intensity at different points in time. The conversion produces corresponding spectrogram components (Z^(O), Z^(I)), wherein the components (Z^(O), Z^(I)) are a version of the pair of TFRs (X^(O), X^(I)) that has been converted in step 1604 into a magnitude and phase representation of the pair of TFRs, and define intensity of frequency at different points in time. In step 1605, patches are extracted from the spectrogram components (Z^(O), Z^(I)) using patch extractor 606. In one example embodiment herein, step 1605 results in slices of the spectrograms from step 1604 (by way of polar coordinate converter 604) being obtained along a time axis, wherein the slices are fixed sized images (such as, e.g., 512 bins and 128 frames), according to one non-limiting and non-exclusive example embodiment herein. Patches can be obtained based on the magnitude of components (Z^(O), Z^(I))(wherein such patches also are hereinafter referred to as “magnitude patches (MP^(O),MP^(I))” or ““magnitude spectrogram patches (MP^(O),MP^(I))”)). In one example, step 1605 is performed according to the procedures described in the Reference [38], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein.

In a next step 1606, the magnitude patch (MP^(O)) (e.g., the original mix spectrogram magnitude) obtained in step 1605 is applied to a pre-trained network architecture, wherein, according to one example aspect herein, the network architecture is the U-Net architecture 1500. For purposes of the present description of FIG. 16 , it is assumed that the U-Net architecture 1500, and, in particular, each of the respective paths 1504-1 to 1504-x, is pre-trained according to, in one example embodiment, procedure 1700 to be described below in conjunction with FIG. 17 . In one example embodiment herein, at least some components of the network architecture 1500 are similar to the network architecture disclosed in Reference [11] and/or Reference [24], which are incorporated by reference herein in their entireties, as if set forth fully herein, although these examples are non-exclusive and non-limiting.

In step 1608, the output of layer 1504 n of each of the expansive paths 1504-1 to 1504-x is employed as a mask for being applied by mask combiner 608 to the input image of layer 1502 a, to provide a corresponding estimated magnitude spectrogram 1508 (also referred to as “layer 1508”). That step 1608 is performed to combine the image (e.g., preferably a magnitude component) from layer 1504 n of each respective expansive path 1504-1 to 1504-x with the phase component from the mixed original spectrogram (of input layer 1502 a) to provide a corresponding complex value spectrogram having both phase and magnitude components (i.e., to render independent of the amplitude of the original spectrogram). Step 1608 may be performed in accordance with any suitable technique.

In the example scenario in which expansive path 1504-1 is pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate a vocal component, the corresponding estimated magnitude spectrogram 1508 obtained as a result of applying the output of layer 1504 of that path as a mask to the input image of layer 1502 a in step 1608 is an estimated vocal magnitude spectrogram. In the example scenario in which expansive path 1504-2 is pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate a guitar component, the corresponding estimated magnitude spectrogram 1508 obtained as a result of applying the output of layer 1504 of that path as a mask to the input image of layer 1502 a in step 1608 is an estimated guitar magnitude spectrogram. In the example scenario in which expansive path 1504-3 is pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate a bass component, the corresponding estimated magnitude spectrogram 1508 obtained as a result of applying the output of layer 1504 of that path as a mask to the input image of layer 1502 a in step 1608 is an estimated bass magnitude spectrogram. In the example scenario in which expansive path 1504-3 is pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate a drum component, the corresponding estimated magnitude spectrogram 1508 obtained as a result of applying the output of layer 1504 of that path as a mask to the input image of layer 1502 a in step 1608 is an estimated drum magnitude spectrogram. In the example scenario in which expansive path 1504-x is pre-trained to learn/estimate/predict/isolate a piano component, the corresponding estimated magnitude spectrogram 1508 obtained as a result of applying the output of layer 1504 of that path as a mask to the input image of layer 1502 a in step 1608 is an estimated piano magnitude spectrogram.

Each result of step 1608 is then applied in step 1610 to an inverse Short Time Fourier Transform (ISTFT) component 610 to transform (by way of a ISTFT) the result of step 1608 from the frequency domain, into a corresponding audio signal in the time domain (step 1610).

For example, application of the estimated vocal magnitude spectrogram obtained in step 1608 to the ISTFT component 610 in step 1610 results in an estimated vocal audio signal, application of the estimated guitar magnitude spectrogram obtained in step 1608 to the ISTFT component 610 in step 1610 results in an estimated guitar audio signal, and application of the estimated bass magnitude spectrogram obtained in step 1608 to the ISTFT component 610 in step 1610 results in an estimated bass audio signal. Similarly by example, application of the estimated drum magnitude spectrogram obtained in step 1608 to the ISTFT component 610 in step 1610 results in an estimated drum audio signal, application of the estimated piano magnitude spectrogram obtained in step 1608 to the ISTFT component 610 in step 1610 results in an estimated piano audio signal, etc.

The estimated vocal audio signal(s) represent estimate(s) of the vocal portion(s) of the mixed original signal first applied to the system 600 in step 1602, and the estimated type(s) of instrumental audio signal(s) represent estimate(s) of the corresponding type(s) of instrumental portion(s) of the mixed original signal first applied to the system 600 in step 1602.

In the foregoing manner, the vocal and/or instrumental component(s) of a mixed original signal that includes both vocal and instrumental type components can be estimated/obtained/predicted/isolated.

It should be noted that, although for convenience the method 1600 is described as being performed simultaneously for each expansive path 1504-1 to 1504-x, the scope of the invention is not necessarily limited thereto, and, it is within the scope of the invention to perform method 1600 separately for each such path 1504-1 to 1504-x, or for more or less than the number of expansive paths 1504-1 to 1504-x and type(s) of vocal or instrumental components shown/described, depending on, for example, the application of interest, and the type(s) of component(s) the architecture 1500 is trained to learn/predict.

Also, although described above in the context of estimating a vocal component and various types of instrumental components, it is within the scope of the present invention to estimate various types of vocal components as well. For example, the mixed original signal may include more than a single vocal component (e.g., and vocal components from different singers having differing vocal/audio characteristics). To estimate the various types of vocal components, the foregoing procedure 1600 is performed using system 600, but for a case where the architecture 1500 is pre-trained (e.g., as described below in connection with FIG. 7 ) such that, for example, expansive path 1504-1 can be used to predict a vocal component from singer A, expansive path 1504-2 can be used to predict a vocal component from singer B, expansive path 1504-3 can be used to predict a vocal component from singer C, and/or the like.

Training in Multiple Instrument and/or Vocal Content Embodiment

In one example of the present embodiment herein, a model of the present embodiment can be trained using an ADAM optimizer. One example of an ADAM optimizer that can be employed is described in Reference [12], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein, although this example is non-limiting and non-exclusive. Given the heavy computational requirements of training such a model, in one example embodiment herein, input audio is downsampled to 8192 Hz in order to speed up processing. Then, a Short Time Fourier Transform is computed with a window size of 1024 and a hop length of 768 frames, and patches of, e.g., 128 frames (roughly 1 seconds) are extracted, which then are fed as input and targets to the architecture 1500. Also in this example embodiment, the magnitude spectrograms are normalized to the range [0, 1]. Of course, these examples are non-exclusive and non-limiting.

The manner in which training is performed, according to an example of the present embodiment herein, will now be described in greater detail, with reference to FIGS. 6 b and 17. For purposes of this description, it is assumed that it is desired to train the architecture 1500 to learn to predict/isolate at least one or more particular types of musical instrument components (e.g., one or more of a guitar component, bass component, a drum component, or the like), and possibly a vocal component as well, of mixed original signals p used as training data, wherein, in one example embodiment, the mixed original signals e used for training are “original” tracks A such as those identified as being correct matches with corresponding “instrumental” tracks B in step 308 of FIG. 3 described above (for the case of “musical instrument training”), and/or, in some cases, correct matches with at least one corresponding “vocal track” in step 308 of FIG. 3 described above (for the case of training to learn the vocal component). For example, it is assumed that it is desired to train the architecture 1500 such that path 1504-2 learns guitar content of mixed original signals 9, path 1504-3 learns bass content of mixed original signals p, path 1504-4 learns drum content of mixed original signals T, and path 1504-x learns other instrument content (e.g., piano) of mixed original signals p. Also, in at least some cases, it is assumed that it is desired to train the architecture 1500 such that path 1504-1 learns vocal content of mixed, original signals. Referring to FIG. 6 b , the system 600 is shown, along with additional elements including the loss calculator 612 and parameter adapter 614. The system 600, loss calculator 612, and parameter adapter 614 form training system 650. In the present example embodiment, the system 600 includes U-Net architecture 1500 (versus architecture 500). The system 600 of FIG. 6 b is the same as the system 600 of FIG. 6 a that includes the architecture 1500, and, for purposes of explaining the training procedure 1700, the architecture 1500 is assumed to not be trained yet in the present example, at least at the start of procedure 1700. However, although only a single signal Y is shown, in the present example embodiment herein, there may be multiple target signals Y, each including a particular type of content, and each corresponding to a respective one of the paths 1504-1 to 1504-x. Also, in some embodiments, there may be a set of the loss calculator 612 and parameter adapter 614 (and, in some embodiments, ISTFT 610 and/or mask combiner 608 as well), for each such target signal Y, wherein each set corresponds to a particular one of the signals Y. In still another example embodiment herein, there may be as many of the complete components (e.g., system 650) shown in FIG. 6B as there are target signals Y (depending on how many types of components the system 600 is being trained to learn). Each signal Y may be obtained in a manner as described above. For convenience, however, the below description is made in the context of describing only a single set of the mentioned components (although, of course, the scope of the invention is not limited thereto).

In one example embodiment herein, in step 1702 the system 650 of FIG. 6 b is fed with short time fragments or stems of at least one signal φ, and the system 650 operates as described above and according to steps 1602 to 1610 of FIG. 16 described above (as part of step 1702), in response to the signal φ (except that the architecture 1500 is assumed not to be fully trained yet).

For each instance of the signal q applied to the system 600 of FIG. 6 b , the system 600 provides at least one output f(X, Θ) from the mask combiner 608, to the loss calculator 612. In one example embodiment herein, the paths 1504-1 to 1504-x each provide an output from the architecture 1500 to mask combiner 608 (or respective ones of a plurality of mask combiners 608, if more than one is included), which mask combiner 608 responds by providing corresponding outputs to the ISTFT 610 and corresponding outputs f(X, Θ) to the loss combiner 612 (or to respective sets of those components, if more than one set is included). Also input to the loss calculator 612, according to an example embodiment herein, is at least one target signal Y, which represents the magnitude of the spectrogram of at least one target audio. For example, in a case where it is desired to train an expansive path of the architecture 1500, such as expansive path 1504-2, to predict/isolate a guitar instrument component of an original mixed signal (such as a track “A”), then the target audio is a “guitar instrumental” track B (e.g., a track of a guitar component) (from step 308, or otherwise obtained) corresponding thereto, and the magnitude of the spectrogram of that track “B” is obtained for use as signal Y via application of a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) thereto. Also by example, in a case where it is desired to train an expansive path of the architecture 1500, such as expansive path 1504-3, to predict/isolate a bass instrument component of an original mixed signal (such as a track “A”), then the target audio is a “bass instrumental” track B (e.g., a track of a bass component) (from step 308 or otherwise obtained) corresponding thereto, and the magnitude of the spectrogram of that track “B” is obtained for use as signal Y via application of a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) thereto. As a further example, in a case where it is desired to train an expansive path of the architecture 1500, such as expansive path 1504-4, to predict/isolate a drum instrument component of an original mixed signal (such as a track “A”), then the target audio is a “drum instrumental” track B (e.g., a track of a drum component) (from step 308 or otherwise obtained) corresponding thereto, and the magnitude of the spectrogram of that track “B” is obtained for use as signal Y via application of a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) thereto. Likewise, in a case where it is desired to train an expansive path of the architecture 1500, such as expansive path 1504-x, to predict/isolate another type of instrument component (e.g., a piano component) of an original mixed signal (such as a track “A”), then the target audio is a “piano instrumental” track B (e.g., a track of a piano component)(from step 308 or otherwise obtained) corresponding thereto, and the magnitude of the spectrogram of that track “B” is obtained for use as signal Y via application of a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) thereto. Additionally, in a case where it is desired to train an expansive path of the architecture 1500, such as expansive path 1504-1, to predict/isolate a vocal component of an original mixed signal (such as a track “A”), then the target audio is a vocal track (e.g., a “vocal” track B) (e.g., a track of a vocal component) (from step 308, or otherwise obtained) corresponding thereto, and the magnitude of the spectrogram of that track is obtained for use as signal Y via application of a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) thereto. In the example embodiment herein in which there are multiple target signals Y employed as described above, those multiple target signals Y may include the foregoing respective types of signals Y, each corresponding to the respective ones of the paths 1504-1 to 1504-x and also corresponding to respective ones of the outputs f(X, Θ). Also in one example embodiment herein, each of the multiple target signals Y is applied to the loss calculator 612 simultaneously, such that the simultaneously applied signals Y are in correspondence with an application of the mixed, original signal to the system 600 of FIG. 6B, although in other examples herein, each respective type of target signal Y may be separately applied in correspondence with a respective application of the mixed, original signal to the system 600 of FIG. 6B.

In step 1704 the loss calculator 612 employs a loss function to determine how much difference there is between corresponding ones of the outputs f(X, Θ) (of mask combiner 608) and respective target signals Y. For example, in one example embodiment the loss calculator 612 can employ: a loss function to determine how much difference there is between the output f (X, Θ) associated with path 1504-1 and the target “vocal” signal Y; a loss function to determine how much difference there is between the output f(X, Θ) associated with path 1504-2 and the target “guitar” signal Y; a loss function to determine how much difference there is between the output f(X, Θ) associated with path 1504-3 and the target “bass” signal Y; etc. As described above, in one example embodiment herein, each loss function is the L_(t,l) norm (e.g., wherein the norm of a matrix is the sum of the absolute values of its elements) of a difference between a target spectrogram and the corresponding masked input spectrogram, as represented by formula (F1):

L(X,Y;Θ)=∥f(X,Θ)⊗X−Y∥  (F1)

where X denotes the magnitude of the spectrogram of the original, mixed signal (e.g., including both vocal and instrumental components), Y denotes the magnitude of the spectrogram of the corresponding target signal (wherein Y may be further represented by either Yv for a vocal component or Yi for an instrumental component of the input signal), f(X, Θ) represents a corresponding output of mask combiner 608, and Θ represents the U-Net (or parameters thereof). In the above formula F1, the expression f(X, Θ)⊗X represents masking of the corresponding magnitude X (by mask combiner 608) using the corresponding version of the magnitude X after being applied to the U-Net architecture 1500.

In one example embodiment herein, a result of the performance of each formula F1 is provided from loss calculator 612 to parameter adaptor 614, which, based on the result, varies one or more parameters of the architecture 1500, if needed for each case, to reduce the corresponding loss value(s) (represented by L(X, Y; Θ)) (step 1706). Procedure 1700 can be performed again in as many iterations as needed to substantially reduce or minimize one or more of the respective loss value(s), as needed, in which case (of substantial reduction or minimization) the architecture 1500 is deemed trained to learn the specific type of component type(s) corresponding to the corresponding target audio signal(s) Y used in respective performance(s) of the formula(s). For example, in step 1708 it is determined whether each or respective ones of the loss values is/are sufficiently minimized. If “yes” in step 1708, then control passes to step 1709 to be described below, and the architecture 1500 is deemed trained to learn the particular type(s) of component type(s) corresponding to the target signals Y. If “no” in step 1708, then control passes back to step 1702 where the procedure 1700 is performed again as many times, for one or more respective loss value(s), as needed until the corresponding loss value(s) are deemed sufficiently minimized (in step 708).

An indication of “yes” in step 1708 also indicates that one or more predetermined paths 1504-1 to 1504-x of the architecture 1500 (and system 600) are trained to predict/estimate/isolate predetermined type(s) of component(s) (e.g., a component of the same type as signal(s) Y applied to loss calculator 612). By example, based on training as described in the above examples, the result is that the architecture 1500 (and systems 600 and 650) is trained such that path 1504-1 can predict/estimate/isolate vocal content of mixed original signals φ, path 1504-2 can predict/estimate/isolate guitar content of mixed original signals φ, path 1504-3 can predict/estimate/isolate bass content of mixed original signals φ, path 1504-4 can predict/estimate/isolate drum content of mixed original signals φ, and path 1504-x can predict/estimate/isolate other instrument content (e.g., piano) of mixed original signals φ. In step 1709 it is determined whether an additional one of the expansive paths 1504-1 to 1504-x will be trained. If “yes” in step 1709, then the procedure 1700 returns back to step 1702 where it begins again, but also for the additional one of the expansive paths 1504-1 to 1504-x. If “no” in step 1709, then the procedure ends in step 1710.

It should be noted that the manner in which the parameter adapter 614 varies the parameters of the architecture 1500 in step 1706 can be in accordance with any suitable technique, such as, by example and without limitation, that disclosed in Reference [36], which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, as if set forth fully herein. In one example embodiment, step 1706 may involve altering one or more weights, kernels, and/or other applicable parameter values of the architecture 1500, and can include performing a stochastic gradient descent algorithm.

It should be noted that each respective type of target signal Y may be obtained from a database of such signals, if available (and a magnitude of the spectrogram thereof can be employed). In other example embodiments, each target signal Y may be obtained as described above in conjunction with procedure 800 of FIG. 8 , and, in one example embodiment, in a case where a target signal is a vocal signal, it can be obtained as described above by determining a half-wave difference between a spectrogram of the mixed original signal (i.e., the magnitude component of the spectrogram, and a corresponding instrumental spectrogram (i.e., of the instrumental signal (e.g., one having all instrumental components) paired with the mixed original signal, from the training set, to yield the target vocal signal (step 802).

In a case where it is desired to train the architecture 1500 (and system 600) to estimate various types of vocal components, the above-described procedure 1700 is performed using system of FIG. 6B, but using target vocal signals (as signals Y) corresponding to the different types of vocal components (in one example embodiment herein, the target signals Y may be obtained from a database of such signals, or may be otherwise obtained as described above). As but one non-limiting example, the procedure 1700 can be performed as described above but 1) for a case where a first target vocal signal Y is a vocal component from singer A, 2) a second target vocal signal Y is a vocal component from singer B, 3) a third target signal Y is a vocal component from singer C, and/or the like. As a result, the architecture 1500 (and system 600) becomes trained to estimate/predict/isolate the different types of vocal components from the singers, in one non-limited example herein, in a similar manner as described above. This embodiment also can be employed in conjunction with training instrumental component types as well, such that the architecture 1500 and system 600 are trained to predict/isolate/estimate multiple types of instrument components and multiple types of vocal components.

Quantitative Evaluation

To provide a quantitative evaluation, an example embodiment herein is compared to the Chimera model (see, e.g., Reference[15]) that produced the highest evaluation scores in a 2016 MIREX Source Separation campaign. A web interface can be used to process audio clips. It should be noted that the Chimera web server runs an improved version of the algorithm that participated in MIREX, using a hybrid “multiple heads” architecture that combines deep clustering with a conventional neural network (see, e.g., Reference[16]).

For evaluation purposes an additional baseline model was built, resembling the U-Net model but without skip connections, essentially creating a convolutional encoder-decoder, similar to the “Deconvnet” (see, e.g., Reference[19]).

The three models were evaluated on the standard iKala (see, e.g., Reference [5]) and MedleyDB dataset (see, e.g., Reference [3]). The iKala dataset has been used as a standardized evaluation for the annual MIREX campaign for several years, so there are many existing results that can be used for comparison. MedleyDB on the other hand was recently proposed as a higher-quality, commercial-grade set of multi-track stems.

Isolated instrumental and vocal tracks were generated by weighting sums of instrumental/vocal stems by their respective mixing coefficients as supplied by a MedleyDB Python API. The evaluation is limited to clips that are known to contain vocals, using the melody transcriptions provided in both iKala and MedleyDB.

The following functions are used to measure performance: Signal-To-Distortion Ratio (SDR), Signal-to-Interference Ratio (SIR), and Signal-to-Artifact Ratio (SAR) (see, e.g., Reference [31]). Normalized SDR (NSDR) is defined as

NSDR(S _(e) ,S _(r) ,S _(m))=SDR(S _(e) ,S _(r))−SDR(S _(m) ,S _(r))  (F2)

where S_(e) is the estimated isolated signal, S_(r) is the reference isolated signal, and S_(m) is the mixed signal. Performance measures are computed using the mireval toolkit (see, e.g., Reference [22]).

Table 2 and Table 3 show that the U-Net significantly outperforms both the baseline model and Chimera on all three performance measures for both datasets.

TABLE 2 iKala mean scores U-Net Baseline Chimera NSDR Vocal 11.094 8.549 8.749 NSDR Instrumental 14.435 10.906 11.626 SIR Vocal 23.960 20.402 21.301 SIR Instrumental 21.832 14.304 20.481 SAR Vocal 17.715 15.481 15.642 SAR Instrumental 14.120 12.002 11.539

TABLE 3 MedleyDB mean scores Net U-Baseline Chimera NSDR Vocal 8.681 7.877 6.793 NSDR instrumental 7.945 6.370 5.477 SIR Vocal 15.308 14.336 12.382 SIR Instrumental 21.975 16.928 20.880 SAR Vocal 11.301 10.632 10.033 SAR Instrumental 15.462 15.332 12.530

FIGS. 9 a and 9 b show an overview of the distributions for the different evaluation measures.

Assuming that the distribution of tracks in the iKala hold-out set used for MIREX evaluations matches those in the public iKala set, results of an example embodiment herein are compared to the participants in the 2016 MIREX Singing Voice Separation task. Table 4 and Table 5 show NSDR scores for the example models herein compared to the best performing algorithms of the 2016 MIREX campaign.

TABLE 4 iKala NSDR Instrumental, MIREX 2016 Model Mean SD Min Max Median U-Net 14.435 3.583 4.165 21.716 14.525 Baseline 10.906 3.247 1.846 19.641 10.869 Chimera 11.626 4.151 −0.368 20.812 12.045 LCP2 11.188 3.626 2.508 19.875 11.000 LCP1 10.926 3.835 0.742 19.960 10.800 MC2 9.668 3.676 −7.875 22.734 9.900

TABLE 5 iKala NSDR Vocal, MIREX 2016 Model Mean SD Min Max Median U-Net 11.094 3.566 2.392 20.720 10.804 Baseline 8.549 3.428 −0.696 18.530 8.746 Chimera 8.749 4.001 −1.850 18.701 8.868 LCP2 6.341 3.370 −1.958 17.240 5.997 LCP1 6.073 3.462 −1.658 17.170 5.649 MC2 5.289 2.914 −1.302 12.571 4.945

In order to assess the effect of the U-Net's skip connections, masks generated by the U-Net and baseline models can be visualized. From FIGS. 10 a and 10 b it is clear that, while the baseline model (FIG. 10 b ) captures the overall structure, there is a lack of fine-grained detail observable.

Subjective Evaluation

Emiya et al, introduced a protocol for the subjective evaluation of source separation algorithms (see, e.g., Reference [7]). They suggest asking human subjects four questions that broadly correspond to the SDR/SIR/SAR measures, plus an additional question regarding the overall sound quality.

These four questions were asked to subjects without music training, and the subjects found them ambiguous, e.g., they had problems discerning between the absence of artifacts and general sound quality. For better clarity, the survey was distilled into the following two questions in the vocal extraction case:

Quality: “Rate the vocal quality in the examples below.” Interference: “How well have the instruments in the clip above been removed in the examples below?”

For instrumental extraction similar questions were asked:

Quality: “Rate the sound quality of the examples below relative to the reference above.” Extracting instruments: “Rate how well the instruments are isolated in the examples below relative to the full mix above.”

Data was collected using CrowdFlower, an online platform where humans carry out micro-tasks, such as image classification, simple web searches, etc., in return for small per-task payments.

In the survey, CrowdFlower users were asked to listen to three clips of isolated audio, generated by U-Net, the baseline model, and Chimera. The order of the three clips was randomized. Each question asked one of the Quality and Interference questions. In an Interference question a reference clip was included. The answers were given according to a 7 step Likert scale (see e.g., Reference [13]), ranging from “Poor” to “Perfect”. FIG. 12 is a screen capture of a CrowdFlower question. In other examples, alternatives to 7-step Likert scale can be employed, such as, e.g., the ITU-R scale (see, e.g., Reference [28]). Tools like CrowdFlower enable quick roll out of surveys, and care should be taken in the design of question statements.

To ensure the quality of the collected responses, the survey was interspersed with “control questions” that the user had to answer correctly according to a predefined set of acceptable answers on the Likert scale. Users of the platform were unaware of which questions are control questions. If questions were answered incorrectly, the user was disqualified from the task. A music expert external to the research group was asked to provide acceptable answers to a number of random clips that were designated as control questions.

For the survey 25 clips from the iKala dataset and 42 clips from MedleyDB were used. There were 44 respondents and 724 total responses for the instrumental test, and 55 respondents supplied 779 responses for the voice test.

FIGS. 13 a to 13 d show mean and standard deviation for answers provided on CrowdFlower. The U-Net algorithm outperformed the other two models on all questions.

The example embodiments herein take advantage of a U-Net architecture in the context of singing voice separation, and, as can be seen, provide clear improvements over existing systems. The benefits of low-level skip connections were demonstrated by comparison to plain convolutional encoder-decoders.

The example embodiments herein also relate to an approach to mining strongly labeled data from web-scale music collections for detecting vocal activity in music audio. This is achieved by automatically pairing original recordings, containing vocals, with their instrumental counterparts, and using such information to train the U-Net architecture to estimate vocal or instrumental components of a mixed signal.

FIG. 11 is a block diagram showing an example computation system 1100 constructed to realize the functionality of the example embodiments described herein.

Acoustic attribute computation system also referred to herein as a “computer”) 1100 may include without limitation a processor device 1110, a main memory 1125, and an interconnect bus 1105. The processor device 1110 (410) may include without limitation a single microprocessor, or may include a plurality of microprocessors for configuring the system 1100 as a multi-processor acoustic attribute computation system. The main memory 1125 stores, among other things, instructions and/or data for execution by the processor device 1110. The main memory 1125 may include banks of dynamic random access memory (DRAM), as well as cache memory.

The system 1100 may further include a mass storage device 1130, peripheral device(s) 1140, portable non-transitory storage medium device(s) 1150, input control device(s) 1180, a graphics subsystem 1160, and/or an output display interface (also referred to herein as an “output display”) 1170. A digital signal processor (DSP) 1182 may also be included to perform audio signal processing. For explanatory purposes, all components in the system 1100 are shown in FIG. 11 as being coupled via the bus 1105. However, the system 1100 is not so limited.

Elements of the system 1100 may be coupled via one or more data transport means. For example, the processor device 1110, the digital signal processor 1182 and/or the main memory 1125 may be coupled via a local microprocessor bus. The mass storage device 1130, peripheral device(s) 1140, portable storage medium device(s) 1150, and/or graphics subsystem 1160 may be coupled via one or more input/output (I/O) buses. The mass storage device 1130 may be a nonvolatile storage device for storing data and/or instructions for use by the processor device 1110. The mass storage device 1130 may be implemented, for example, with a magnetic disk drive or an optical disk drive. In a software embodiment, the mass storage device 1130 is configured for loading contents of the mass storage device 1130 into the main memory 1125.

Mass storage device 1130 additionally stores a neural network system engine (such as, e.g., a U-Net network engine) 1188 that is trainable to predict an estimate vocal and/or instrumental component(s) of a mixed original signal, a comparing engine 1190 for comparing an output of the neural network system engine 1188 to a target instrumental or vocal signal to determine a loss, and a parameter adjustment engine 1194 for adapting one or more parameters of the neural network system engine 1188 to minimize the loss. A machine learning engine 1195 provides training data, and an attenuator/volume controller 1196 enables control of the volume of one or more tracks, including inverse proportional control of simultaneously played tracks.

The portable storage medium device 1150 operates in conjunction with a nonvolatile portable storage medium, such as, for example, a solid state drive (SSD), to input and output data and code to and from the system 1100. In some embodiments, the software for storing information may be stored on a portable storage medium, and may be inputted into the system 1100 via the portable storage medium device 1150. The peripheral device(s) 1140 may include any type of computer support device, such as, for example, an input/output (I/O) interface configured to add additional functionality to the system 1100. For example, the peripheral device(s) 1140 may include a network interface card for interfacing the system 1100 with a network 1120.

The input control device(s) 1180 provide a portion of the user interface for a user of the computer 1100. The input control device(s) 1180 may include a keypad and/or a cursor control device. The keypad may be configured for inputting alphanumeric characters and/or other key information. The cursor control device may include, for example, a handheld controller or mouse, a trackball, a stylus, and/or cursor direction keys. In order to display textual and graphical information, the system 1100 may include the graphics subsystem 1160 and the output display 1170. The output display 1170 may include a display such as a CSTN (Color Super Twisted Nematic), TFT (Thin Film Transistor), TFD (Thin Film Diode), OLED (Organic Light-Emitting Diode), AMOLED display (Activematrix Organic Light-emitting Diode), and/or liquid crystal display (LCD)-type displays. The displays can also be touchscreen displays, such as capacitive and resistive-type touchscreen displays. The graphics subsystem 1160 receives textual and graphical information, and processes the information for output to the output display 1170.

FIG. 14 shows an example of a user interface 1400, which can be provided by way of the output display 1170 of FIG. 11 , according to a further example aspect herein. The user interface 1400 includes a play button 1402 selectable for playing tracks, such as tracks stored in mass storage device 1130, for example. Tracks stored in the mass storage device 1130 may include, by example, tracks having both vocal and non-vocal (instrumental) components (i.e., mixed signals), and one or more corresponding, paired tracks including only instrumental or vocal components (i.e., instrumental or vocal tracks, respectively). In one example embodiment herein, the instrumental tracks and vocal tracks may be obtained as described above, including, for example and without limitation, according to procedure FIG. 4 , or they may be otherwise available.

The user interface 1400 also includes forward control 1406 and reverse control 1404 for scrolling through a track in either respective direction, temporally. According to an example aspect herein, the user interface 1400 further includes a volume control bar 1408 having a volume control 1409 (also referred to herein as a “karaoke slider”) that is operable by a user for attenuating the volume of at least one track. By example, assume that the play button 1402 is selected to playback a song called “Night”. According to one non-limiting example aspect herein, when the play button 1402 is selected, the “mixed” original track of the song, and the corresponding instrumental track of the same song (i.e., wherein the tracks may be identified as being a pair according to procedures described above), are retrieved from the mass storage device 1130, wherein, in one example, the instrumental version is obtained according to one or more procedures described above, such as that shown in FIG. 4 , for example. As a result, both tracks are simultaneously played back to the user, in synchrony. In a case where the volume control 1409 is centered at position (i.e., a “center position”) 1410 in the volume control bar 1408, then, according to one example embodiment herein, the “mixed” original track and instrumental track both play at 50% of a predetermined maximum volume. Adjustment of the volume control 1409 in either direction along the volume control bar 1408 enables the volumes of the simultaneously played back tracks to be adjusted in inverse proportion, wherein, according to one example embodiment herein, the more the volume control 1409 is moved in a leftward direction along the bar 1408, the lesser is the volume of the instrumental track and the greater is the volume of the “mixed” original track. For example, when the volume control 1409 is positioned precisely in the middle between a leftmost end 1412 and the center 1410 of the volume control bar 1408, then the volume of the “mixed” original track is played back at 75% of the predetermined maximum volume, and the instrumental track is played back at 25% of the predetermined maximum volume. When the volume control 1409 is positioned all the way to the leftmost end 1412 of the bar 1408, then the volume of the “mixed” original track is played back at 100% of the predetermined maximum volume, and the instrumental track is played back at 0% of the predetermined maximum volume.

Also according to one example embodiment herein, the more the volume control 1409 is moved in a rightward direction along the bar 1408, the greater is the volume of the instrumental track and the lesser is the volume of the “mixed” original track. By example, when the volume control 1409 is positioned precisely in the middle between the center positon 1410 and rightmost end 1414 of the bar 1408, then the volume of the “mixed” original track is played back at 25% of the predetermined maximum volume, and the instrumental track is played back at 75% of the predetermined maximum volume. When the volume control 1409 is positioned all the way to the right along the bar 1408, at the rightmost end 1414, then the volume of the “mixed” original track is played back at 0% of the predetermined maximum volume, and the instrumental track is played back at 100% of the predetermined maximum volume.

In the above manner, a user can control the proportion of the volume levels between the “mixed” original track and the corresponding instrumental track.

Of course, the above example is non-limiting. By example, according to another example embodiment herein, when the play button 1402 is selected, the “mixed” original track of the song, as well as the vocal track of the same song (i.e., wherein the tracks may be identified as being a pair according to procedures described above), can be retrieved from the mass storage device 1130, wherein, in one example, the vocal track is obtained according to one or more procedures described above, such as that shown in FIG. 4 , or is otherwise available. As a result, both tracks are simultaneously played back to the user, in synchrony. Adjustment of the volume control 1409 in either direction along the volume control bar 1408 enables the volume of the simultaneously played tracks to be adjusted in inverse proportion, wherein, according to one example embodiment herein, the more the volume control 1409 is moved in a leftward direction along the bar 1408, the lesser is the volume of the vocal track and the greater is the volume of the “mixed” original track, and, conversely, the more the volume control 1409 is moved in a rightward direction along the bar 1408, the greater is the volume of the vocal track and the lesser is the volume of the “mixed” original track.

In still another example embodiment herein, when the play button 1402 is selected to play back a song, the instrumental track of the song, as well as the vocal track of the same song (wherein the tracks are recognized to be a pair) are retrieved from the mass storage device 1130, wherein, in one example, the tracks are each obtained according to one or more procedures described above, such as that shown in FIG. 4 . As a result, both tracks are simultaneously played back to the user, in synchrony. Adjustment of the volume control 1409 in either direction along the volume control bar 1408 enables the volume of the simultaneously played tracks to be adjusted in inverse proportion, wherein, according to one example embodiment herein, the more the volume control 1409 is moved in a leftward direction along the bar 1408, the lesser is the volume of the vocal track and the greater is the volume of the instrumental track, and, conversely, the more the volume control 1409 is moved in a rightward direction along the bar 1408, the greater is the volume of the vocal track and the lesser is the volume of the instrumental track.

Of course, the above-described directionalities of the volume control 1409 are merely representative in nature, and, in other example embodiments herein, movement of the volume control 1409 in a particular direction can control the volumes of the above-described tracks in an opposite manner than those described above, and/or the percentages described above may be different that those described above, in other example embodiments. Also, in one example embodiment herein, which particular type of combination of tracks (i.e., a mixed original signal paired with either a vocal or instrumental track, or paired vocal and instrumental tracks) is employed in the volume control technique described above can be predetermined according to pre-programming in the system 1100, or can be specified by the user by operating the user interface 1400.

Another example embodiment will now be described. In this example embodiment, a media playback device can communicate with another entity, such as, for example, a media delivery system, to retrieve content that enables the media playback device to play back an instrumental and/or vocal component of a selected track. The media delivery system stores masks (e.g., such as masks obtained at layer 504 n described above) for various tracks, and can provide selected ones of the masks to the media playback device upon request, to enable the media playback device to playback at least one of an instrumental or vocal component of a corresponding track. By example and without limitation, in a case where the media playback device requests a mask corresponding to a vocal or instrumental component of a particular track, the media delivery system correlates the request to the corresponding mask stored in or in association with the media delivery system, retrieves the mask, and forwards it back to the media play back device, where it is employed to generate and play back the vocal and/or instrumental component of the track.

One example embodiment of a procedure according to this aspect of the invention will be described below. Before describing the procedure, however, reference will first be made to FIG. 19 , which shows a block diagram of an example embodiment of a media playback device 1902 and a media delivery system 904. In this example, the media playback device 1902 includes a user input device 1636, a display device 1638, a data communication device 1634, a media content output device 1640, a processing device 1648, and a memory device 1650.

The media playback device 1902 operates to play media content. For example, the media playback device 1902 is configured to play media content that is provided (e.g., streamed or transmitted) by a system external to the media playback device 1902, such as the media delivery system 904, another system, or a peer device. In other examples, the media playback device 1902 operates to play media content stored locally on the media playback device 1902. In yet other examples, the media playback device 1902 operates to play media content that is stored locally as well as media content provided by other systems.

In some embodiments, the media playback device 1902 is a handheld or portable entertainment device, smartphone, tablet, watch, wearable device, or any other type of computing device capable of playing media content. In other embodiments, the media playback device 1902 is a laptop computer, desktop computer, television, gaming console, set-top box, network appliance, blue-ray or DVD player, media player, stereo, or radio.

In some embodiments, the media playback device 1902 is a system dedicated for streaming personalized media content in a vehicle environment.

The user input device 1636 operates to receive a user input 1652 for controlling the media playback device 1902. As illustrated, the user input 1652 can include a manual input 1654 and a voice input 1656. In some embodiments, the user input device 1636 includes a manual input device 1660 and a sound detection device 1662.

The manual input device 1660 operates to receive the manual input 1654 for controlling playback of media content via the media playback device 1902. In some embodiments, the manual input device 1660 includes one or more buttons, keys, touch levers, switches, control bars, and/or other mechanical input devices for receiving the manual input 1654. For example, the manual input device 1660 includes a text entry interface, such as a mechanical keyboard, a virtual keyboard, a virtual control bar (e.g., volume control bar), or a handwriting input device, which is configured to receive a text input, such as a text version of a user query. In addition, in some embodiments, the manual input 1654 is received for managing various pieces of information transmitted via the media playback device 1902 and/or controlling other functions or aspects associated with the media playback device 1902.

The sound detection device 1662 operates to detect and record sounds from proximate the media playback device 1902. For example, the sound detection device 1662 can detect sounds including the voice input 1656. In some embodiments, the sound detection device 1662 includes one or more acoustic sensors configured to detect sounds proximate the media playback device 1902. For example, acoustic sensors of the sound detection device 1662 include one or more microphones. Various types of microphones can be used for the sound detection device 1662 of the media playback device 1902.

In some embodiments, the voice input 1656 is a user's voice (also referred to herein as an utterance) for controlling playback of media content via the media playback device 1902. For example, the voice input 1656 includes a voice version of a user query received from the sound detection device 1662 of the media playback device 1902. In addition, the voice input 1656 is a user's voice for managing various data transmitted via the media playback device 1902 and/or controlling other functions or aspects associated with the media playback device 1902.

Referring still to FIG. 19 , the display device 1638 operates to display information. Examples of such information include media content playback information, notifications, and other information. In some embodiments, the display device 1638 is configured as a touch sensitive display and includes the manual input device 1660 of the user input device 1636 for receiving the manual input 1654 from a selector (e.g., a finger, stylus etc.) controlled by a user. In some embodiments, therefore, the display device 1638 operates as both a display device and a user input device. The display device 1638 operates to detect inputs based on one or both of touches and near-touches. In some embodiments, the display device 1638 displays a graphical user interface for interacting with the media playback device 1902. Other embodiments of the display device 1638 do not include a touch sensitive display screen. Some embodiments include a display device and one or more separate user interface devices. Further, some embodiments do not include a display device.

The data communication device 1634 operates to enable the media playback device 1902 to communicate with one or more computing devices over one or more networks, such as the network 1910. For example, the data communication device 1634 is configured to communicate with the media delivery system 904 and receive media content from the media delivery system 904 at least partially via the network 1910. The data communication device 1634 can be a network interface of various types which connects the media playback device 1902 to the network 1910. Examples of the data communication device 1634 include wired network interfaces and wireless network interfaces. Wireless network interfaces includes infrared, BLUETOOTH® wireless technology, 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, and cellular or other radio frequency interfaces in at least some possible embodiments. Examples of cellular network technologies include LTE, WiMAX, UMTS, CDMA2000, GSM, cellular digital packet data (CDPD), and Mobitex.

The media content output device 1640 operates to output media content. In some embodiments, the media content output device 1640 includes one or more embedded speakers 1664 which are incorporated in the media playback device 1902.

Alternatively or in addition, some embodiments of the media playback device 1902 include an external speaker interface 1666 as an alternative output of media content. The external speaker interface 1666 is configured to connect the media playback device 1902 to another system having one or more speakers, such as headphones, a portal speaker, and a vehicle entertainment system, so that media output is generated via the speakers of the other system external to the media playback device 1902. Examples of the external speaker interface 1666 include an audio output jack, a USB port, a Bluetooth transmitter, a display panel, and a video output jack. Other embodiments are possible as well. For example, the external speaker interface 1666 is configured to transmit a signal that can be used to reproduce an audio signal by a connected or paired device such as headphones or a speaker.

The processing device 1648, in some embodiments, includes one or more central processing units (CPU). In other embodiments, the processing device 1648 additionally or alternatively includes one or more digital signal processors, field-programmable gate arrays, or other electronic circuits.

The memory device 1650 typically includes at least some form of computer-readable media. The memory device 1650 can include at least one data storage device. Computer readable media includes any available media that can be accessed by the media playback device 1902. By way of example, computer-readable media includes computer readable storage media and computer readable communication media.

Computer readable storage media includes volatile and nonvolatile, removable and non-removable media implemented in any device configured to store information such as computer readable instructions, data structures, program modules, or other data. Computer readable storage media includes, but is not limited to, random access memory, read only memory, electrically erasable programmable read only memory, flash memory and other memory technology, compact disc read only memory, blue ray discs, digital versatile discs or other optical storage, magnetic storage devices, or any other medium that can be used to store the desired information and that can be accessed by the media playback device 1902. In some embodiments, computer readable storage media is non-transitory computer readable storage media.

Computer readable communication media typically embodies computer readable instructions, data structures, program modules or other data in a modulated data signal such as a carrier wave or other transport mechanism and includes any information delivery media. The term “modulated data signal” refers to a signal that has one or more of its characteristics set or changed in such a manner as to encode information in the signal. By way of example, computer readable communication media includes wired media such as a wired network or direct-wired connection, and wireless media such as acoustic, radio frequency, infrared, and other wireless media. Combinations of any of the above are also included within the scope of computer readable media.

The memory device 1650 operates to store data and instructions. In some embodiments, the memory device 1650 stores instructions for a media content cache 1672, a caching management engine 1674, and a media playback engine 1676.

Some embodiments of the memory device 1650 include the media content cache 1672. The media content cache 1672 stores media content items, such as media content items that have been received from the media delivery system 904. The media content items stored in the media content cache 1672 may be stored in an encrypted or unencrypted format. In some embodiments, the media content cache 1672 also stores metadata about media content items such as title, artist name, album name, length, genre, mood, era, etc. The media content cache 1672 can further store playback information about the media content items and/or other information associated with the media content items.

The caching management engine 1674 is configured to receive and cache media content in the media content cache 1672 and manage the media content stored in the media content cache 1672. In some embodiments, when media content is streamed from the media delivery system 904, the caching management engine 1674 operates to cache at least a portion of the media content into the media content cache 1672. In other embodiments, the caching management engine 1674 operates to cache at least a portion of media content into the media content cache 1672 while online so that the cached media content is retrieved for playback while the media playback device 1902 is offline.

The media playback engine 1676 operates to play media content. As described herein, the media playback engine 1676 is configured to communicate with the media delivery system 904 to receive one or more media content items (e.g., through the media stream 932). In other embodiments, the media playback engine 1676 is configured to play media content that is locally stored in the media playback device 1902.

In some embodiments, the media playback engine 1676 operates to retrieve one or more media content items that are either locally stored in the media playback device 1902 or remotely stored in the media delivery system 904. In some embodiments, the media playback engine 1676 is configured to send a request to the media delivery system 904 for media content items and receive information about such media content items for playback.

Referring still to FIG. 19 , the media delivery system 904 includes a media content server 900, and a content management server 902.

The media delivery system 904 includes one or more computing devices and provides media content to the media playback device 1902 and, in some embodiments, other media playback devices as well. In addition, the media delivery system 904 interacts with the media playback device 1902 to provide the media playback device 1902 with various functionalities.

In at least some embodiments, the media content server 900 and the content management server 902 are provided by separate computing devices. In other embodiments, the media content server 900 and the content management server 902 are provided by the same computing device(s). Further, in some embodiments, at least one of the media content server 900 and the content management server 902 is provided by multiple computing devices. For example, the media content server 900 and the content management server 902 may be provided by multiple redundant servers located in multiple geographic locations.

Although FIG. 19 shows a single media content server 900, and a single content management server 902, some embodiments include multiple media content servers and content management servers. In these embodiments, each of the multiple media content servers and content management servers may be identical or similar to the media content server 900 and the content management server 902, respectively, as described herein, and may provide similar functionality with, for example, greater capacity and redundancy and/or services from multiple geographic locations. Alternatively, in these embodiments, some of the multiple media content servers and/or the content management servers may perform specialized functions to provide specialized services. Various combinations thereof are possible as well.

The media content server 900 transmits stream media to media playback devices such as the media playback device 102. In some embodiments, the media content server 900 includes a media server application 912, a processing device 914, a memory device 916, and a network access device 918. The processing device 914 and the memory device 916 may be similar to the processing device 148 and the memory device 150, respectively, which have each been previously described. Therefore, the description of the processing device 914 and the memory device 916 are omitted for brevity purposes.

The network access device 918 operates to communicate with other computing devices over one or more networks, such as the network 1910. Examples of the network access device include one or more wired network interfaces and wireless network interfaces. Examples of such wireless network interfaces of the network access device 918 include wireless wide area network (WWAN) interfaces (including cellular networks) and wireless local area network (WLANs) interfaces. In other examples, other types of wireless interfaces can be used for the network access device 918.

In some embodiments, the media server application 912 is configured to stream media content, such as music or other audio, video, or other suitable forms of media content. The media server application 912 includes a media stream service 922, a media application interface 924, and a media data store 926. The media stream service 922 operates to buffer media content, such as media content items 930A, 930B, and 930N (collectively 930), for streaming to one or more media streams 932A, 932B, and 932N (collectively 932).

The media application interface 924 can receive requests or other communication from media playback devices or other systems, such as the media playback device 1902, to retrieve media content items from the media content server 900. For example, in FIG. 19 , the media application interface 924 receives communication from the media playback device 1902 to receive media content from the media content server 900.

In some embodiments, the media data store 926 stores media content items 934, media content metadata 936, media contexts 938, user accounts 940, and taste profiles 942. The media data store 926 may comprise one or more databases and file systems. Other embodiments are possible as well.

As discussed herein, the media content items 934 (including the media content items 930) may be audio, video, or any other type of media content, which may be stored in any format for storing media content.

The media content metadata 936 provides various information associated with the media content items 934. In addition or alternatively, the media content metadata 936 provides various information associated with the media contexts 938. In some embodiments, the media content metadata 936 includes one or more of title, artist name, album name, length, genre, mood, era, etc. In some embodiments, some or all of the media content metadata may be provided by the content predictor 112.

Referring still to FIG. 19 , each of the media contexts 938 is used to identify one or more media content items 934. In some embodiments, the media contexts 938 are configured to group one or more media content items 934 and provide a particular context to the group of media content items 934. Some examples of the media contexts 938 include albums, artists, playlists, and individual media content items. By way of example, where a media context 938 is an album, the media context 938 can represent that the media content items 934 identified by the media context 938 are associated with that album.

As described above, the media contexts 938 can include playlists 939. The playlists 939 are used to identify one or more of the media content items 934. In some embodiments, the playlists 939 identify a group of the media content items 934 in a particular order. In other embodiments, the playlists 939 merely identify a group of the media content items 934 without specifying a particular order. Some, but not necessarily all, of the media content items 934 included in a particular one of the playlists 939 are associated with a common characteristic such as a common genre, mood, or era.

In some embodiments, a user can listen to media content items in a playlist 939 by selecting the playlist 939 via a media playback device, such as the media playback device 1902. The media playback device then operates to communicate with the media delivery system 904 so that the media delivery system 904 retrieves the media content items identified by the playlist 939 and transmits data for the media content items to the media playback device for playback.

At least some of the playlists 939 may include user-created playlists. For example, a user of a media streaming service provided using the media delivery system 904 can create a playlist 939 and edit the playlist 939 by adding, removing, and rearranging media content items in the playlist 939. A playlist 939 can be created and/or edited by a group of users together to make it a collaborative playlist. In some embodiments, user-created playlists can be available to a particular user only, a group of users, or to the public based on a user-definable privacy setting.

In some embodiments, when a playlist is created by a user or a group of users, the media delivery system 904 operates to generate a list of media content items recommended for the particular user or the particular group of users. In some embodiments, such recommended media content items can be selected based at least on taste profiles 942. Other information or factors can be used to determine the recommended media content items. Examples of determining recommended media content items are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/858,377, titled MEDIA CONTENT ITEM RECOMMENDATION SYSTEM, filed Dec. 29, 2017, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

The user accounts 940 are used to identify users of a media streaming service provided by the media delivery system 904. In some embodiments, a user account 940 allows a user to authenticate to the media delivery system 904 and enable the user to access resources (e.g., media content items, playlists, etc.) provided by the media delivery system 904. In some embodiments, the user can use different devices to log into the user account and access data associated with the user account in the media delivery system 904. User authentication information, such as a username, an email account information, a password, and other credentials, can be used for the user to log into his or her user account. It is noted that, where user data is to be protected, the user data is handled according to robust privacy and data protection policies and technologies. For instance, whenever personally identifiable information and any other information associated with users is collected and stored, such information is managed and secured using security measures appropriate for the sensitivity of the data. Further, users can be provided with appropriate notice and control over how any such information is collected, shared, and used.

The taste profiles 942 contain records indicating media content tastes of users. A taste profile can be associated with a user and used to maintain an in-depth understanding of the music activity and preference of that user, enabling personalized recommendations, taste profiling and a wide range of social music applications. Libraries and wrappers can be accessed to create taste profiles from a media library of the user, social website activity and other specialized databases to obtain music preferences.

In some embodiments, each taste profile 942 is a representation of musical activities, such as user preferences and historical information about the users' consumption of media content, and can include a wide range of information such as artist plays, song plays, skips, dates of listen by the user, songs per day, playlists, play counts, start/stop/skip data for portions of a song or album, contents of collections, user rankings, preferences, or other mentions received via a client device, or other media plays, such as websites visited, book titles, movies watched, playing activity during a movie or other presentations, ratings, or terms corresponding to the media, such as “comedy,” etc.

In addition, the taste profiles 942 can include other information. For example, the taste profiles 942 can include libraries and/or playlists of media content items associated with the user. The taste profiles 942 can also include information about the user's relationships with other users (e.g., associations between users that are stored by the media delivery system 904 or on a separate social media site). The taste profiles 942 can be used for a number of purposes. One use of taste profiles is for creating personalized playlists (e.g., personal playlisting). An API call associated with personal playlisting can be used to return a playlist customized to a particular user.

Referring still to FIG. 19 , the content management server 902 can operate to isolate vocal and/or instrumental components of audio tracks and can store them as content media items 934 in media content store 926, as media content items in media stream service 922, and/or can store them locally in memory device 954. The content management server 902 also can generate information or content associated with any such components, such as, for example, features obtained using U-Net architecture 500. In particular, according to one example aspect herein, the content management server 902 can obtain spectral masks obtained at output layer 504 n of the U-Net architecture 500. The masks can be stored as media content items 934 in media content store 926, media content items in media stream service 922, and/or can be stored in memory device 954. In some embodiments, the content management server 902 includes a content predictor 112, a processing device 952, a memory device 954, and a network access device 956. The processing device 952, the memory device 954, and the network access device 956 may be similar to the processing device 914, the memory device 916, and the network access device 918, respectively, which have each been previously described.

In some embodiments, the content predictor 112 operates to interact with the media playback device 1902 and provide content such as vocal and/or instrumental components of audio track for particular musical songs, original (mixed) audio signals (i.e., tracks including both vocal and instrumental components) for those songs, and/or spectral masks for the respective vocal and/or instrumental components, in response to one or more requests from the media playback device 1902. The content predictor 112 can interact with other servers, such as the media content server 900 to receive or forward such content, and training data. The content predictor 112 can include the neural network system 500 shown in FIG. 600 and can perform the procedure 400 of FIG. 4 to separate/predict vocal and instrumental components from audio tracks, and also can include training system 650 of FIG. 6 b and can perform procedure 700 of FIG. 7 to train the U-Net architecture 500. Various types of content (e.g., vocal and/or instrumental components of audio tracks for particular musical songs, original (mixed) audio signals (i.e., tracks including both vocal and instrumental components) for those songs, and/or spectral masks for the respective vocal and/or instrumental components) generated or otherwise provided by the content predictor 112 using those procedures, is stored as content media items 934 in media content store 926, as media content items in media stream service 922, and/or can be stored in memory device 954, and can be provided to the media playback device 1902 upon request, or automatically without a request from the media playback device 1902, at predetermined times, or the like. The various types of content can be stored (in media content store 926, media stream service 922, and/or memory device 954) in a manner that forms an accessible catalogue. In one example embodiment herein, the catalogue includes the various types of content relating to the same musical songs, artists, or the like, arranged/stored in association with each other, and where the various types of content can be looked up, retrieved, and forwarded to other servers, such as, by example, media playback device 1902.

In another example embodiment herein, instead of or in addition to the content predictor 112 generating the above-described content, the content can be obtained from another source external to the media delivery system 904. In still another example embodiment herein, a content predictor like the content predictor 112 of the media delivery system 904 also is included in the media playback device 1902, and content generated thereby can be stored in media content cache 1672.

Having described FIG. 19 , reference will now be made to FIG. 18 , which is a flow diagram of a process 1800 for enabling media playback device 1902 to access content from media delivery system 904, for enabling the media playback device 1902 to generate and playback to a user at least one component of a track selected by the user. In one example embodiment herein, the process 1800 is performed by the media playback device 1902. Reference also will be made to process 2000 shown in FIG. 20 , which is performed by the media delivery system 904 for enabling that system to provide content to the media playback device 1902, to enable the media playback device 1902 to generate and playback to the user at least one component of the track selected by the user, according to one example embodiment herein.

A user operates the media playback device 1902 to enter an input 1652 specifying selection of a track (e.g., in one example, this may be a karaoke-enabled track in a karaoke environment, although this example is non-limiting). The client media player receives the input 1652 (step 1802), and, in response thereto, sends a request for predetermined content corresponding to the selected track to the media delivery system 904 by way of network 1910 (step 1804). In one example embodiment herein, the request can specify that requested predetermined content includes at least one spectral mask, such as, for example, a spectral mask of an instrumental or vocal component of the selected track (i.e., a spectral mask that was obtained using procedure 400 for a case where the U-Net architecture 500 is trained to learn instrumental or vocal content, respectively), or an “original” (“mixed”) version of the selected track (i.e., an audio track having vocal and instrumental components). Which type of spectral mask is requested can be predetermined (i.e., pre-programmed into the media playback device 1902) and selected automatically in response to the selection made via input 1652 received in step 1802, or can be specified by the user via input 1652, although these examples are non-limiting.

In one example embodiment herein, the media delivery system 904 receives the request for the spectral mask in step 2002, and then responds in step 2004 by correlating the request to a corresponding stored spectral mask, to thereby select the mask. By example, information server 902 employs the processing device 952 to correlate the received request to one of the plurality of spectral masks stored in memory device 954, media data store 926 (e.g., as media content items 934), and/or media stream service 922. The correlated-to spectral mask is then retrieved in step 2006 and, in one example embodiment herein, compressed in step 2008, although in other examples, the retrieved mask is not compressed. In step 2010 the mask (which may have been compressed in step 2008) is forwarded to media playback device 1902, which receives the mask in step 1806.

As described above, in one example embodiment herein, which particular spectral mask is correlated-to in step 2004 can be specified by the request provided by media playback device 1902, and/or can be determined by the media playback device 1902 and/or be user-specified. In another example embodiment herein, which particular spectral mask is correlated-to in step 2004 can be determined by the media delivery system 904. By example, in that embodiment the media delivery system 904 responds to the request received in step 2002 by automatically determining which mask to correlate to based on content included in the request (i.e., the content requests a particular mask), or, in another example, the media delivery system 904 can determine which mask to correlate to in step 2004, based on pre-programming or predetermined operating criteria. Of course, these examples are non-limiting. In either case, the media delivery system 904 retrieves (in step 2006) the correlated-to spectral mask corresponding to the track identified in the request received from the media playback device 1902 in step 2002, and performs steps 2008 and (in some embodiments) 2010 as described above.

Referring again to step 1806, after receiving the mask in that step, the media playback device 1902 (preferably in real-time) decompresses the mask in step 1808, if the mask received from the media delivery system 904 is compressed. In one example embodiment herein, the media playback device 1902 also accesses an “original” (“mixed”) track (i.e., an audio track having vocal and instrumental components) that corresponds to the track selection specified by the input 1652 received in step 1802. For example, based on the received input 1652, the media playback device 1902 correlates the track selection specified by the input 1652 to the corresponding track stored therein (e.g., in media content cache 1672), and retrieves the correlated-to track. In accordance with one example embodiment herein, the media playback device 1902 also performs a Short-Term Fourier Transform to the original mixed track to obtain a corresponding spectrogram, in step 1810, and also converts that obtained spectrogram to polar coordinates in that step 1810, to obtain a spectrogram. In one example, the Short-Term Fourier Transform of step 1810 is performed in a similar manner as in step 402 (using TFR obtainer 602) described above, to yield a TFR that is a spectrogram of 2D coefficients having frequency and phase content, and the polar conversion of step 1810 is performed in a similar manner as in step 404 (using polar coordinate converter 604) described above to produce a corresponding spectrogram (component) that has been converted into a magnitude and phase representation of the TFR, defining intensity of frequency at different points in time.

It should be noted that, although FIG. 18 represents that step 1810 occurs after steps 1804 to 1808, the scope of the invention is not so limited. By example, it is within the scope of the invention for step 1810 to be performed in parallel with, before, or after, the performance of steps 1804 to 1808. Also, in another example embodiment herein, instead of the original (mixed) track being retrieved within the media playback device 1902, in other example embodiments herein the original (mixed) track can be retrieved by the media delivery system 904, such as in response to receiving the request in step 2002. By example, the processing device 914 or 952 can respond to the request by correlating it in step 2004 to the corresponding original mixed track stored in, for example, memory device 954, memory device 916, media content items in media stream service 922, and/or media content items 934 of media data store 926. The correlated-to original mixed track is then retrieved in step 2006, compressed (if required by predetermined operating criteria) in step 2008, and forwarded (in step 2010) to the media playback device 1902, which receives the original mixed track in step 1806, decompresses it in step 1808, and performs a Short-Term Fourier Transform and polar conversion to the original mixed track to obtain the spectrogram, in step 1810. In still other example embodiments herein, the original (mixed) track is retrieved by the media delivery system 904 as in the foregoing-described manner, and the system 904 performs the Short-Term Fourier Transform (and polar conversion) to the original (mixed) track to obtain the spectrogram. Then the media content system 904 provides the spectrogram to the media playback device 1902 (which, in such a case, does not need to perform the Short-Term Fourier Transform and polar conversion), wherein the device 1902 employs the spectrogram to perform step 1812.

Step 1812 will now be described. In step 1812, a magnitude component of the spectrogram obtained in step 1810 is multiplied with the spectral mask that was received in step 1806, to obtain a masked magnitude spectrogram (e.g., like by way of component 608 described above). In one example embodiment herein, and more particularly, step 1812 includes performing element-wise multiplication, such that the magnitude component of the spectrogram obtained in step 1810 is multiplied element-wise with the spectral mask, to obtain the masked magnitude spectrogram. In an example case where the spectral mask is a spectral mask of an instrumental component, the obtained masked magnitude spectrogram is an estimated instrumental magnitude spectrum, whereas in an example case where the spectral mask is a spectral mask of a vocal component, the obtained masked magnitude spectrogram is an estimated vocal magnitude spectrum.

Next, in step 1814 a phase of the original spectrogram is applied to the masked magnitude spectrogram to create a complex-valued spectrogram having both phase and magnitude components (i.e., to render independent of the amplitude of the original spectrogram). Steps 1812 and 1814 may be performed in accordance with any suitable technique for obtaining the complex-valued spectrogram.

The result of step 1814 is then applied in step 1816 to an Inverse Short Time Fourier Transform (ISTFT) (e.g., like by way of component 610 described above) to transform (by way of a ISTFT) the result of step 1814 from the frequency domain, into an audio signal in the time domain (step 1816). In an example case where the spectral mask from step 1806 was a spectral mask of an instrumental component, the audio signal resulting from step 1816 is an estimated instrumental audio signal. For example, the estimated instrumental audio signal represents an estimate of the instrumental portion of the mixed original signal. In the foregoing manner, the instrumental component of a mixed original signal that includes both vocal and instrumental components can be obtained/predicted/isolated at the media playback device 1902.

In another example case where the spectral mask from step 1806 was a spectral mask of a vocal component, the audio signal resulting from step 1816 is an estimated vocal audio signal. For example, the estimated vocal audio signal represents an estimate of the vocal portion of the mixed original signal. In the foregoing manner, the vocal component of a mixed original signal that includes both vocal and instrumental components can be obtained/predicted/isolated at the media playback device 1902.

It should be noted that, in one example embodiment herein, steps 1806 to 1816 preferably are performed in real-time after the spectral mask is received in step 1804, and that steps 2004 to 2010 preferably are performed in real-time after the spectral mask is received in step 2002. Referring again to FIG. 11 , the input control devices 1180 will now be described.

Input control devices 1180 can control the operation and various functions of system 1100.

Input control devices 1180 can include any components, circuitry, or logic operative to drive the functionality of system 1100. For example, input control device(s) 1180 can include one or more processors acting under the control of an application.

Each component of system 1100 may represent a broad category of a computer component of a general and/or special purpose computer. Components of the system 1100 (400) are not limited to the specific implementations provided herein.

Software embodiments of the examples presented herein may be provided as a computer program product, or software, that may include an article of manufacture on a machine-accessible or machine-readable medium having instructions. The instructions on the non-transitory machine-accessible machine-readable or computer-readable medium may be used to program a computer system or other electronic device. The machine- or computer-readable medium may include, but is not limited to, floppy diskettes, optical disks, and magneto-optical disks or other types of media/machine-readable medium suitable for storing or transmitting electronic instructions. The techniques described herein are not limited to any particular software configuration. They may find applicability in any computing or processing environment. The terms “computer-readable”, “machine-accessible medium” or “machine-readable medium” used herein shall include any medium that is capable of storing, encoding, or transmitting a sequence of instructions for execution by the machine and that causes the machine to perform any one of the methods described herein. Furthermore, it is common in the art to speak of software, in one form or another (e.g., program, procedure, process, application, module, unit, logic, and so on), as taking an action or causing a result. Such expressions are merely a shorthand way of stating that the execution of the software by a processing system causes the processor to perform an action to produce a result.

Some embodiments may also be implemented by the preparation of application-specific integrated circuits, field-programmable gate arrays, or by interconnecting an appropriate network of conventional component circuits.

Some embodiments include a computer program product. The computer program product may be a storage medium or media having instructions stored thereon or therein which can be used to control, or cause, a computer to perform any of the procedures of the example embodiments of the invention. The storage medium may include without limitation an optical disc, a ROM, a RAM, an EPROM, an EEPROM, a DRAM, a VRAM, a flash memory, a flash card, a magnetic card, an optical card, nanosystems, a molecular memory integrated circuit, a RAID, remote data storage/archive/warehousing, and/or any other type of device suitable for storing instructions and/or data.

Stored on any one of the computer-readable medium or media, some implementations include software for controlling both the hardware of the system and for enabling the system or microprocessor to interact with a human user or other mechanism utilizing the results of the example embodiments of the invention. Such software may include without limitation device drivers, operating systems, and user applications. Ultimately, such computer-readable media further include software for performing example aspects of the invention, as described above.

Included in the programming and/or software of the system are software modules for implementing the procedures described herein.

While various example embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example, and not limitation. It will be apparent to persons skilled in the relevant art(s) that various changes in form and detail can be made therein. Thus, the present invention should not be limited by any of the above described example embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents.

In addition, it should be understood that the FIG. 11 is presented for example purposes only. The architecture of the example embodiments presented herein is sufficiently flexible and configurable, such that it may be utilized (and navigated) in ways other than that shown in the accompanying figures.

Further, the purpose of the foregoing Abstract is to enable the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the public generally, and especially the scientists, engineers and practitioners in the art who are not familiar with patent or legal terms or phraseology, to determine quickly from a cursory inspection the nature and essence of the technical disclosure of the application. The Abstract is not intended to be limiting as to the scope of the example embodiments presented herein in any way. It is also to be understood that the procedures recited in the claims need not be performed in the order presented.

REFERENCES

-   [1] Vijay Badrinarayanan, Alex Kendall, and Roberto Cipolla. Segnet:     A deep convolutional encoder-decoder architecture for scene     segmentation. IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine     Intelligence, 2017. -   [2] Aayush Bansal, Xinlei Chen, Bryan Russell, Ab-hinav Gupta, and     Deva Ramanan. Pixelnet: Towards a general pixel-level architecture.     arXiv preprint arXiv:1609.06694, 2016. -   [3] Rachel M. Bittner, Justin Salamon, Mike Tierney, Matthias Mauch,     Chris Cannam, and Juan Pablo Bello. MedleyDB: A multitrack dataset     for annotation-intensive MIR research. In Proceedings of the 15th     International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference,     ISMIR 2014. Taipei, Taiwan, Oct. 27-31, 2014, pages 155-160, 2014. -   [4] Kevin Brown. Karaoke idols: Popular Music and the Performance of     Identity. Intellect Books, 2015, -   [5] Tak-Shing Chan, Tzu-Chun Yeh, Zhe-Cheng Fan, Hung-Wei Chen, Li     Su, Yi-Hsuan Yang, and Roger Jang. Vocal activity informed singing     voice separation with the iKala dataset. In Acoustics, Speech and     Signal Processing (ICASSP), 2015 IEEE International Conference on,     pages 718-722. IEEE, 2015. -   [6] Pritish Chandna, Marius Miron, Jordi Janer, and Emilia Gómez.     Monoaural audio source separation using deep convolutional neural     networks. In International Conference on Latent Variable Analysis     and Signal Separation, pages 258-266. Springer, 2017. -   [7] Valentin Emiya, Emmanuel Vincent, Niklas Harlander, and Volker     Hohmann. Subjective and objective quality assessment of audio source     separation. IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language     Processing, 19(7):2046-2057, 2011. -   [8] Emad M Grais and Mark D Plumbley. Single channel audio source     separation using convolutional denoising autoencoders. arXiv     preprint arXiv:1703.080.19, 2017. -   [9] Po-Sen Huang, Minje Kim, Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, and Paris     Smaragdis. Singing-voice separation from monaural recordings using     deep recurrent neural networks. In Proceedings of the 15th     International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference,     IS-MIR 2014, Taipei, Taiwan, Oct. 27-31, 2014, pages 477-482, 2014. -   [10] Eric Humphrey, Nicola Montecchio, Rachel Bittner, Andreas     Jansson, and Tristan Jehan. Mining labeled data from web-scale     collections for vocal activity detection in music. In Proceedings of     the 18th ISMIR Conference, 2017. -   [11] Phillip Isola, Jun-Yan Zhu, Tinghui Zhou, and Alexei A Efros.     Image-to-image translation with conditional adversarial networks.     arXiv preprint arXiv:1611.07004, 2016. -   [12] Diederik Kingma and Jimmy Ba. Adam: A method for stochastic     optimization. arXiV preprint arXiv:1412.6980, 2014. -   [13] Rensis Likert. A technique for the measurement of attitudes.     Archives of psychology, 1932. -   [14] Jonathan Long, Evan Shelhamer, and Trevor Darrell. Fully     convolutional networks for semantic segmentation. In Proceedings of     the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition,     pages 3431-3440, 2015. -   [15] Yi Luo, Zhuo Chen, and Daniel P W Ellis. Deep clustering for     singing voice separation. 2016. -   [16] Yi Luo, Zhuo Chen, John R Hershey, Jonathan Le Roux, and Nima     Mesgarani. Deep clustering and conventional networks for music     separation: Stronger together. arXiv preprint arXiv:1611.06265,     2016. -   [17] Annamaria Mesaros and Tuomas Virtanen. Automatic recognition of     lyrics in singing. EURASIP Journal on Audio, Speech, and Music     Processing, 2010(1):546047, 2010. -   [18] Annamaria Mesaros, Tuomas Virtanen, and Anssi Klapuri. Singer     identification in polyphonic music using vocal separation and     pattern recognition methods. In Proceedings of the 8th International     Conference on Music Information Retrieval, ISMIR 2007, Vienna,     Austria, Sep. 23-27, 2007, pages 375-378, 2007. -   [19] Hyeonwoo Noh, Seunghoon Hong, and Bohyung Han. Learning     deconvolution network for semantic segmentation. In Proceedings of     the IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision, pages     1520-1528, 2015. -   [20] Nicola Orio et al. Music retrieval: A tutorial and review.     Foundations and Trends R in Information Retrieval, 1(1):1-90, 2006. -   [21] Alexey Ozerov, Pierrick Philippe, Frdric Bimbot, and Rmi     Gribonval. Adaptation of bayesian models for single-channel source     separation and its application to voice/music separation in popular     songs. IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing,     15(5):1564-1578, 2007. -   [22] Colin Raffel, Brian McFee, Eric J. Humphrey, Justin Salamon,     Oriol Nieto, Dawen Liang, and Daniel P. W. Ellis. Mir eval: A     transparent implementation of com-mon MIR metrics. In Proceedings of     the 15th International Society for Music Information Retrieval     Conference, ISMIR 2014. Taipei, Taiwan, Oct. 27-31, 2014, pages     367-372, 2014. -   [23] Zafar Rafii and Bryan Pardo. Repeating pattern extraction     technique (REPET): A simple method for music/voice separation. IEEE     transactions on audio, speech, and language processing, 21(1):73-84,     2013. -   [24] Olaf Ronneberger, Philipp Fischer, and Thomas Brox. U-net:     Convolutional networks for biomedical image segmentation. In     International Conference on Medical Image Computing and     Computer-Assisted Intervention, pages 234-241. Springer, 2015. -   [25] Andrew J R Simpson, Gerard Roma, and Mark D Plumbley. Deep     karaoke: Extracting vocals from musical mixtures using a     convolutional deep neural network. In International Conference on     Latent Variable Analysis and Signal Separation, pages 429-436.     Springer, 2015. -   [26] Paris Smaragdis, Cedric Fevotte, Gautham J Mysore, Nasser     Mohammadiha, and Matthew Hoffman. Static and dynamic source     separation using nonnegative factorizations: A unified view. IEEE     Signal Processing Magazine, 31(3):66-75, 2014. -   [27] Philip Tagg. Analysing popular music: theory, method and     practice. Popular music, 2:37-67, 1982. -   [28] Thilo Thiede, William C Treurniet, Roland Bitto, Christian     Schmidmer, Thomas Sporer, John G Beerends, and Catherine Colomes.     Peaq-the itu standard for objective measurement of perceived audio     quality. Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, 48(1/2):3-29,     2000. -   [29] George Tzanetakis and Perry Cook. Musical genre classification     of audio signals. IEEE Transactions on speech and audio processing,     10(5):293-302, 2002. -   [30] Shankar Vembu and Stephan Baumann. Separation of vocals from     polyphonic audio recordings. In ISMIR 2005, 6th International     Conference on Music Information Retrieval, London, UK, 11-15 Sep.     2005, Proceedings, pages 337-344, 2005. -   [31] Emmanuel Vincent, Rémi Gribonval, and Cédric Févotte.     Performance measurement in blind audio source separation. IEEE     transactions on audio, speech, and language processing,     14(4):1462-1469, 2006. -   [32] Tuomas Virtanen. Monaural sound source separation by     nonnegative matrix factorization with temporal continuity and     sparseness criteria. IEEE transactions on audio, speech, and     language processing, 15(3):1066-1074, 2007. -   [33] Richard Zhang, Phillip Isola, and Alexei A Efros. Colorful     image colorization. In European Conference on Computer Vision, pages     649-666. Springer, 2016. -   [34] Ellis, Daniel P W, Whitman, Brian, and Porter, Alastair.     Echoprint: An open music identification service. In Proceedings of     the 12th International Society for Music Information Retrieval     Conference (ISMIR). ISMIR, 2011 (2 sheets). -   [35] Rosenblatt F.: The perceptron: A probabilistic model for     information storage and organization in the brain, Psychological     review, Vol. 65, No. 6, pp. 386-408. -   [36] Goodfellow, Ian, et al. Deep learning. Vol. 1. Cambridge: MIT     press, 2016. Chapter 9: Convolutional Neural Networks. -   [37] Jannson, Andreas et al., Singing Voice Separation With Deep     U-Net Convolutional Networks, 18^(th) International Society for     Music Information Retrieval Conference, Suzhou, China, 2017.     Reference [37] is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety,     as if set forth fully herein. -   [38] Schlüter, Jan, and Sebastian Böck. “Musical onset detection     with convolutional neural networks.” 6th International Workshop on     Machine Learning and Music (MML), Prague, Czech Republic. 2013. -   [39] Griffin, Daniel, and Jae Lim. “Signal estimation from modified     short-time Fourier transform.” IEEE Transactions on Acoustics,     Speech, and Signal Processing 32.2 (1984): 236-243. 

1-20. (canceled)
 21. A method for estimating a component of a provided audio signal, comprising: converting the provided audio signal to an image; processing the image with a neural network to estimate one of vocal content and instrumental content and to generate a mask corresponding to either estimated vocal content of the provided audio signal or estimated instrumental content of the provided audio signal; storing the mask as a stored mask; and providing the stored mask to a media playback device to enable the media playback device to play back the estimated vocal content or the estimated instrumental content.
 22. The method of claim 21, wherein the neural network is a U-Net.
 23. The method of claim 22, wherein the U-Net includes a convolution path for encoding the image and a deconvolution path for decoding the image encoded by the convolution path.
 24. The method of claim 21, wherein providing the stored mask occurs upon receiving a track request provided by the media playback device.
 25. The method of claim 21, wherein the mask is configured such that applying the mask to the provided audio signal generates a masked spectrogram representing the estimated vocal content or the estimated instrumental content.
 26. The method of claim 21, further comprising compressing the mask prior to providing the stored mask to the media playback device.
 27. The method of claim 21, wherein the converting, the processing, the storing and the providing are performed by a media delivery system.
 28. A method for estimating a component of a provided audio signal, comprising: requesting a stored mask, the stored mask being generated by processing, with a neural network, an image converted from a provided audio signal to generate a mask corresponding to either estimated vocal content of the provided audio signal or estimated instrumental content of the provided audio signal and storing the mask; receiving the stored mask; applying the stored mask to the provided audio signal to generate a masked spectrogram representing the estimated vocal content or the estimated instrumental content; transforming the masked spectrogram to another audio signal corresponding to the estimated instrumental content or the estimated vocal content; and playing back the another audio signal.
 29. The method of claim 28, wherein the neural network is a U-Net.
 30. The method of claim 29, wherein the U-Net includes a convolution path for encoding the image and a deconvolution path for decoding the image encoded by the convolution path.
 31. The method of claim 28, wherein the mask is generated and stored by a media delivery system.
 32. The method of claim 28, wherein the stored mask is compressed.
 33. The method of claim 32, further comprising decompressing the stored mask prior to applying the stored mask.
 34. The method of claim 33, wherein the decompressing is performed by a media playback device.
 35. The method of claim 28, wherein the requesting, the receiving, the applying, the transforming and the playing back are performed by a media playback device.
 36. A media delivery system, comprising: a memory storing a program; and a processor, controllable by the program to perform a method for estimating a component of a provided audio signal, the method including: converting the provided audio signal to an image; processing the image with a neural network to estimate one of vocal content and instrumental content and to generate a mask corresponding to either estimated vocal content of the provided audio signal or estimated instrumental content of the provided audio signal; storing the mask as a stored mask; and providing the stored mask to a media playback device to enable the media playback device to play back the estimated vocal content or the estimated instrumental content.
 37. The media delivery system of claim 36, wherein the neural network is a U-Net.
 38. The media delivery system of claim 37, wherein the U-Net includes a convolution path for encoding the image and a deconvolution path for decoding the image encoded by the convolution path.
 39. The media delivery system of claim 36, wherein providing the stored mask occurs upon receiving a track request provided by the media playback device.
 40. The media delivery system of claim 36, wherein the method further includes compressing the mask prior to providing the stored mask to the media playback device. 